ft j ChicagoM a r cronVol. 66, Nd. 32 University of Chicago, Friday, May 2, 1958Finalists for best group costume prize trudge up to thesecond floor of Ida Noyes hall to be judged, as audiencelines staircase awaiting the decision. Rosenthal SC president;officers, chairmen chosenby Robert HalaszAt the first meeting of the new Student Government, Joel Rosenthal was elected presi¬dent, other SG officers and committee chairman chosen, and disputed seats filled.The election of Rosenthal (SRP-humanities) seemed routine until ISL realized they mighthave more members present than the majority party, SRP. ISL members who had abstainedchanged their votes to “no” and Rosenthal was elected by 20-18. According to an ISL spokes¬man, ISL was just interested in discovering the party ratio at the meeting.The other officers were —— •elected by previous arrange- Maureen Byers (ISL-college) wasment. Carol Silver (SRP-col-lege) was chosen vice-president,300 at fend festive, gayfourth annual FOTA ballby Rochelle DubnowEighteen striking, semi-authentic black grease-painted witch doctors and natives withspears in hand, captured a white man hunter (with a built-in kettle) and the coveted ma¬hogany, Magnovox console model hi-lidelity set at Beaux Arts ball last Saturday night.Phi Sigma Delta fraternity won the hi-fi (generously donated by Virgil Martin of CarsonPirie Scott) for the most ingeniously costumed group at the ball.Winners of the best couple prize were J. Marshall Ash, also of Phi Sigma Delta, and LeslieCooper; a cross bearing mis-sionary holding “Cornerstones took the prize for the most origi-of Christianity” on one arm nal mans costume. ^and his Sadie Thompson type date After a little difficulty maneu-on the other. vering down the Ida Noyes stair-Most original woman’s costume case» Peter Abrams (anotherprize this year was won by Phoe- mem^er Sigma Delta),be Torrence, a teacher in the UC mastered the problem of seeinglab school who came as a very through his petals and pro-at tractive Lana Turner, accom- reeded to accept his prize frompanied by none other than the un- Charles O Connell, co • chairmanfortunate, but nevertheless dash- °f tbe dance,ing Johnny Stompanato, complete Personally chosen by Marilynwith the slick, black, abundant cJt> briefly attlrea John Youn„coiffure, and silver medallion won prize for the most hand¬flashing from beneath the silk some man at the ball,shirt unbuttoned to the waist. Anne James, a dramatic Gre-Cheryl was at home with the baby cjan goddess, captured the judges’sitter (grandma) no doubt. hearts and the prize for the pret-A UC’er in the form of a rose tiest girl at the dance. AnotherCoot jazz, hot headsraise riot in C-shopby Mary FinkleHeated controversy in the C-shop Monday noon mush¬roomed into a minor hassle involving a blaring juke box (rowout of commission), a war banner which took shape in aC-shop butter knife, and a number of indignant unidentifiedadversaries, chiefly female.The argument was saved iterated, this time standing on theshort of the riot stage by the in- cord until an ally (another anti-tervention of A. J. Eidson, secur- jukebox person) came on theity supervisor, at the request of scenxe Wlth a b«tte^ knife> intend'Frances Trevarrow, C-shop man- to cut off the p ug.ager. No charges were pressed. In the ensuing struggle, a “pro”f ,, . ... grappled with the cord in an ef-4uAM°r^ing t0 S!°ry, wblfb fort to put the plug back into thethe Maroon was able to piece to- socketi b , lna(lvertently pulled itgether from the reports of various t ot the controversial juke box.bystanders, the scene for the has- Havl achieVed their desiredfie “ «* wh“ ,a 8r“l‘P ,ot end, the anti-juke box individualslunehers began playing the juke returned t0 Jthelr seatSj butterbox, as one described it, oudly. knjfe stm , ,aln vi Th(Members of this group will here- wlth the knif‘ was accosted by aafter be referred to as pros. ) *‘pr0" who had not seen the actualIt was not long before a young incidents and believed that thewoman walked over to the ma- wire had been cut by his opponent,chine and pulled the plug out of Verbal disagreement followed, inthe electrical outlet. When ques- which “rights” were challenged,tioned about her action by the At that moment, Eidson arrived“pros,” she supposedly claimed at the somewhat disordered C-that she was trying to study and Sh0p. The group of pros, now de-the loud music disturbed her. prived of the manufactured mu*An indignant “pro" plugged the sic, began singing,cord in again. The opponent rfe- The comedy was ended. white and gold Greek goddess,Judy Bowly, was runner-up forthe prettiest girl prize.UC’s Dick Tracy (a medicalstudent) and Frances Mooredressed as green palm trees withmonkeys perched on theirbranches were awarded the prizefor the most humorous couple ofthe evening.Other^ costumes of merit at theball were by coincidence quitesimilar in nature.Beta Theta Pi fraternity, nodoubt preparing for the Humani¬ties 2 comprehensive examination,came dressed as “Oedipus Rex.”Phi Gamma fraternity, whiteand gold from head to gold paint¬ed toes, portrayed a strikingGreek frieze.Both fraternities were finalistswith Phi Sigma Delta in the con¬test for the best costumed group.Characterizing the “new socialregulations,” Mrs. Mary AliceNewman, director of student ac¬tivities, appeared at the ball withalarm clock in hand as a “Univer¬sity required chaperone.” Dressedin a white cotton hairdo, toppedoff by a not exactly Lilly Dachechapeau, black two-sizes-too-largedress, rolling eye, eye-glasses anda set of false teeth that wouldmake any orthodontist shudder,Mrs. Newman cut a Humorousand striking, if a bit grotesque,figure.In the same vein, John P. Neth-erton, dean of students, came asTV idol and law enforcement offi¬cer of the olde west, Wyatt Earp.Need we say more!Very amusing also were Mr.and Mrs. John Sheldon (Sheldonis vice president of the Univer¬sity) , who wore costumes that re¬sembled what Mr. and Mrs. LittleBoy Blue might wear (that is, ifLittle Boy Blue had a wife).Over three hundred studentsand faculty entered Ida Noyes forthe dance at 10 pm under the fes¬tive blaze of theatrical kleig lightsto be greeted by a transformedgay and baloon filled Ida Noyeshall.Deserving much credit for thetransformation are Mike Kindred,co-chairman of the ball, JudyJohnson, a crew of volunteerworkers, and trusty Ida Noyesguard Walter Jeschlce.see ‘Beaux,’ page 5 elected secretary, and Jacob Mi-chaelson (SRP-business school)was picked treasurer.Also by previous arrangement,three ISLers were elected as com¬mittee chairmen. The electionsand rules chairman is FrancesMoore (ISL-coJlege); campus ac¬tion committee, Bob Gerwin (ISL-college); NS A committee, DonRichards (ISL-college). SRP’schiarmen are: CORSO, ColleenCummings (humanities); academ¬ic freedom-civil liberties, Jay Gold-enberg (social sciences); student-faculty relations, Zev Aelony (col¬lege) and community relations co-chairmen Judy Tushnet (college)and Ed Riddick (FTF). The aca¬demic freedom-civil liberties com¬mittee was newly created by SRPproposal at the meeting, and wasnot opposed.When Rosenthal took the gavel,SRP’s majority shrunk to 19-18,since the president can vote onlyin case of a tie, and when Rich¬ards walked in, the assembly wassplit evenly. But SRP later as¬sumed the majority again, en¬abling them to win all three con¬tested seats in the humanities bythe party line vote of 21-17. Fol¬lowing a recount, it was foundthree SRPers and one ISLer hadtied for the three seats in the elec¬tion. Rosenthal gave up his seatin the humanities, by becomingpresident, and it falls vacant intwo weeks. He hinted it might beawarded the ISL loser, TylerHaynes, by bi-partisan agreement.No other business had been puton the agenda, and when Miss Sil¬ver requested that SG send lettersto the Illinois senators opposingthe Jenner-Butler bill, it was un¬able to muster the* two-thirdsvote needed to bring up specialbusiness. The Jenner-Butler billwould abolish the SupremeCourt’s power of judicial reviewm in cases concerning educationalpolicy, i.e. in desegregation is¬sues. ISL proposed to delay send¬ing the letter on the groundsthat no one had read the text ofthe bill itself. SRP replied that itscontent was well known and suf¬ficient to justify sending the let¬ter.A misunderstood ISL motionwhich passed allowed SRP tobring the matter up again, thistime needing only a majority voteto send the letter. The proposalpassed over ISL opposition.The last order of business pro¬posed that the Hyde Park-Ken*wood Conference be allowed touse SG’s name in holding its bene¬fit at the Picadilly Theatre. May22. After an SG member com¬mented that the dean of student’sproposed student activities chang¬es would prohibit this, the billpassed unanimously.The next Student Governmentmeeting will be held the Tuesdayevening after next in Law North.Early entrants givenplacement changeEarly entrants have been granted status equal to that ofhigh school graduates in meeting undergraduate degree re¬quirements, Harold Hay don, College dean of studentsannounced.The action, taken by the College faculty, means that a stu¬dent entering the University before completing high school,in and after the summer quarter 1957, will be held for no moreCollege comprehensive examinations than will a high schoolgraduate with similar program and placement results.The previous requirement stated that students enteringafter their sophomore year of high school were required totake an additional four comprehensive examinations over thenormal degree requirement. Students entering after theirjunior year were required to take an additional two compre-hensives.The change in requirements was made retroactive, Haydonsaid, with the qualification that there be no exemptions atthe expense of a balanced general studies program. He addedthat as with all students, early entrants are free to registerin courses not required for their degrees in addition to thosewhich are required.■OHXManKMMHMiDr. N. R. NelsonOPTOMETRISTS1138 E. 63 HY 3-5352PETERSON MOVING Wc Specialize inRound-0-Beef and WafflesOpen from Dawn to Dawn1342 E. 53rd St.Jimmy’sSINCE 1940Ellen Coughlin Beauty Salon5105 Lake Park Ave. Ml 3-2060SPECIALISTS IN HAIR STYLINGAND PERMANENT WAVINGOpen Mon. - Sat. — 9 m.m. - 11 p.m.The two fastest deodorants in the world!Old Spice Stick Deodorant is built lor speed. Plasticcase is applicator. Nothing to take out, no push-up,push-back. Just remove cap and apply. Prefer a spray?Old Spice Spray Deodorant dries twice as fast as othersprays! Choose stick or spray...if it’s Old Spice,it’s the fastest, cleanest, easiest deodorantyou can use. Each JL , 4plus tax liceby SHULTONHelen Sobell tells of husband;'case a symbol of these times'by Jane ForerSpecial CREASE $*}75and WASH 4• Simonize• Mechanic• Road Service• Across fromCo-opHarper Super ServiceDealer in Sinclair Proaucts5556 HARPER PL 2-9654Helen Sobell, wife of imprisoned Morton Sobell who was convicted with Julius and EthelRosenerg, spoke in the social sciences building on Saturday. Introduced by Malcolm Sharp,Mrs. Sobell told the audience she wanted to “tell you what is happening to my husband”before and during the eight years since the time of his arrest.“Our case has become a symbol of these times,” she said. “The fact that Morton wasmoved from Alcatraz was a sign that we are moving in the direction of justice. For the firsttime we could see him and not ;have to look at him through a lousness of their methods. Eliza- ished school. Mrs. Sobell said thatlittle pane of glass. We need to beth Bentley (one of the prosecu- her husband “had participated inbe concerned with what happens tors) has become discredited since left-of-center activities. At thatthe time of the trial.” Other prose¬cutors mentioned were Roy Cohenand Harry Gold.“There wasn’t one witness whogave any kind of testimony as faras conspiracy was concerned withto our fellow human beings. Myhusband doesn’t belong in anykind of prison. He hasn’t commit¬ted any kind of crime. He is inno¬cent.”According to the Columbia Law time they required no justifica¬tion.”MRE. Sobell described the en¬trance into the Sobell residencein Mexico of five men who “saidReview, Mrs. Sobell said, “our relation to my husband,” Mrs. So- he was Johnny Johnson and hadcase was the outstanding politicalcase of the times. If it were onlya personal question, then I wouldnot be justified in taking yourtime; this case reaches out and bell said.One witness “said he was scaredto death. He said that he himselfhad committed perjury in anotherinstance. This was the testimonyconcerns you, as every case of upon which my husband was pon-injustice threatens every individual in a free society.” victed and sentenced to thirtyyears in-prison." robbed a bank in Acapulco.” Ac¬cording to Mrs. Sobell, her hus¬band, was dragged down thestairs, hit over the head with theback of a gun. and thrown into acar. She was dragged into anothercar. “We were driven night andday without stopping until finallyWHEN YOU know the facts ofmy husband’s case, she declared,“I hope that you will help take ac¬tion which will help to bring aboutmy husband’s freedom.”“History itself hasat this timetorn away the central issue of thetrial,” she remarked. The chargewas of conspiracy to commit es¬pionage. In such charges, she said,“we were giving to espionage, thecredit for things which were thefault of our education.”Mrs. Sobell saidthat each per¬son'who has examined the trialrecords said that the sentenceswere out of proportion to thecharges that were made.“THERE ARE things which can “The other part of the case was we reached the American border.My husband was shown a cofti-plaint that he had had five con¬versations with Julius Rosen¬berg.”Forty days later, “They addedhis name to the indictment thathad been drawn up against Juliusand Ethel Rosenberg—only hisname, without a single other wordreferring to my husband.”Mrs. Sobell again stressed therelation of her husband’s case tothe freedom of other people. “Theway that such things are prevent¬ed lies in the action which peoplethroughout the country take. Forthat we had fled to Mexico,” So-bell’s wife recalled. “This was in¬troduced into the trial in a sort ofconsciousness of guilt theory. Wehad gone in a perfectly naturalway at a time when New Yorkteachers were thrown out for as¬sociating with any radical move¬ments and scientists were beingpersecuted.” Sobell was both ateacher and a scientist.TWO DAYS after their arrivalin Mexico, said Mrs. Sobell, herfamily read of the outbreak of theKorean War, and a few weekslater, they read of the arrest of you who are young it is importantthe Rosenbergs “on the fantastic that you be permitted to live andcharge of having stolen the secret to work in the freest possible kindof the atomic bomb.” of atmosphere.” Mrs. Sobell askedSobell had gone to school with the audience to take part in an ap-be said about the prosecutors Julius Rosenberg and had known poal to the president on behalf ofwhich will challenge the scrupu- him in the years after they fin- Sobell for a pardon or a new trial.The life insurance you didn't buymay not cost you anything. Butthink of what it could cost yourfamily! Make sure you haveenough life insurance.Ralph J. Wood Jr. '481 N. LaSalle St. Chicago 2, III.FR 2-2390 • RE 1-0855SUN LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY OF CANADARepresentative 1 fa y*f CREWCUT i*4h iru-kut SS±(p) KEEPS THE HAIR RW'"STANDING UP" PWf*FOR A SHARPER L1A1BHOOKING CREWCUT JJARORSTICKTh« Green White ContainerAT DRUG STORES S BARBER SHOPS PAUL TALALAY, associate professor in the Ben May laboratoryfor cancer research and in the department of biochemistry. Dr. Tala-lay is a displaced M.D., who spends most of his time directing a ire-search program searching out the secrets of teroid hormones. TheAmerican Cancer society became so impressed with his work that itgave Talalay a lifetime grant to allow him to devote his time to anystudy that may yield information about cancer. Mr. Talalay alsospends some time seeing patients with endocrine diseases, and occa¬sionally lectures for biochemistry courses.Many articles about hormones and cancer have been published byTalalay in professional journals such as Endocrinology. Cancer Re¬search, and the Journal of Biological Chemistry, but he is allergic tothe thought of writing a book.During the inflation of the twenties Paul Talalay was born of Rus¬sian parents in Germany, where he lived till the advent of Hitler.In 1933 the Talalays emigrated to England. It was in his early edu¬cation in England that he developed an interest in the biologicalsciences, an interest that brought him to the USA and a MIT BS inbiophysics in 1944. He was at the UC medical school from 1944 to1946, and then transferred to Yale, where he got his MD in 1948.During the following years he served as a house surgeon at theMassachusetts General hospital in Boston before joining the UCfaculty in 1950. It was during his student days at UC that Talalay.under the influence of Charles Huggins, became interested in steroidhormones and cancer.Pamela Samuels, a biochemist, and a PhD of Cambridge (England)married Paul Talalay in London in 1953. The Talalays and their twochildren, Antony, 4, and Susan, 20 months, live in Hyde Park.Photography, woodworking and classical music compete for Dr.Talalay’s off duty time, but they are poor seconds to the first Joveof a pure scientist—his research. Search for knowledge for its ownsake—the earmark of pure research—is tempered in. the Ben Maylaboratory by the hope that the research may lead to the eventualconqust of cancer.(photo and article by ed szkirpan)Dr. N. J. De Franco HOBBY HOUSE RESTAURANT2 e CHICAGO MAROON • May 2, 1958O'Connell writes of 61;calls class 'distinquished'Are entering classes getting worse and worse as many College students tend to think? Itisn’t so according to Charles D. O’Connell, director of admissions in the May issue of theUniversity of Chicago Magazine.“Academically, the Class of ’61 represents one of the most distinguished college freshmanclasses in the country,” O’Connell said in an article titled “Class of ’61: Student Profile.”The admissions director remarked that Chicago medians on College entrance examinationboards are among the highestin the country. sume that Chicago freshmen are Chicago trend,“Of the 479 f u, ion; distinguished only for their aca- sits wcu> me owucjuiv: ucmv/r tne iresnmen, 1 2d demic interests. Their activities in which most entering studentsheld memberships in the National profile shows a wide degree of (76) indicated they will eventuallyHonor society; 15 were high participation and leadership in major. Medicine was a close sec-school valedictorians; eleven were high school extracurricular activ- ond with 67. In all, 160 freshmensays the report,“physics was the academic fieldwinners of National Merit schol- ities.” indicated physical science majors;arships and 43 of National Merit Where do the students come 81, biological science; 67, socialcertificates,” the article reports, from? The largest single group sci-ence, and 63, humanities."Former UC studentsin news conferenceTwo former UC students, above, Bruce Larkin and HollyO’Connor, talk with Mikhail Menshikov, Russian ambassadorto the US, and Ruth Hagy after their appearance on RuthHagy’s “College News Conference” last Sunday, over theAmerican Broadcasting com-pany television and radio net- interview with Menshikov “wasworks. 1° be another plaform to popu-, , , - , .. . larizc the smiling envoy fromLarkin, formoily active in Stu- Moscow.” But after the program,dent Government is now interna- Bela Bachkai, one of the pickets,l.onal affairs vice president of the said he Uke(1 the the colIUS National Student association students “so intelligently inter-Miss O Connor former president viewed” Menshikov,of International house and Young During the interview, LarkinDemocrats is now assistant pro- hammered the question of in¬ducer of “College News Confer- crcasing U.S.-Soviet student ex-cnce' change, as he has been doing forRepresentatives of the Amer- several years. Menshikov said heican Hungarian foundation pick- is “in favor of increasing theeted the studio where the con- number” of exchange students,ference was being broadcast, but he refused to be pushed to asaying they feared the televised definite figure. “Additionally, they toted 385 jg from Chicago and its environs, O’Connell indicated, however, thatmedals for distinctions of one 33.8 per cent. The three most many of these students willkind or another, off high schoolstages."According to O’Connell “it Californiawould be a grave mistake to as- heavily represented states after change their plans in the nextIllinois are New York, Ohio and three years.Why Chicago? By far the most“Following a well - established frequently stated reason for com¬ing to Chicago was the Univer¬sity’s academic excellence, he said.Choose strawberry queenfor annual Phi Sig festivalA queen to reign June 14 over fresh strawberries and icecream at Phi Sigma Delta house will be chosen in an all¬campus election Tuesday and Wednesday. Her crowning willbe a highlight of Phi Sig’s annual Strawberry festival.The queen candidates are “ “Donna Becker, Phi Delta Zeta Beta Tau and Carol Tyl,Theta; Thea Feldman, Green hall; U<L 1*w..school]] . ^ . .„. ^ , Balloting will be: Tuesday inGinger Harper, Quadranglers; £obb hall, 941 am; Mandel corri-Carleen Johnson, Glee club; Jac- dor, 12-4 pm; and Burton-Judson,queline Lewis, opera appreciation 5-7 pm. On Wednesday, a votingclub; Nancy Moulton, Phi Gamma booth will be stationed at CobbDelta; Gloria Porath, Esoteric; hall, 9-11:30; Mandel corridor, 12-4Odessa Ragsdell, Wyvern; Marion pm; and Ida Noyes hall, 5-7 pm.Rose, Delta Sigma; Sue Syke, Sig- Voters must present their valid-ma; Joan Waller, Mortarbord and ated identification cards. Ugly manNuclear committee WUCB installs transmitterorganizes for action ,n women s resi^ence hal*UC student committee for a Sane Nuclear policy will beorganized at a meeting at 4 pm, Monday, in Rosenwald 2. Dr.Homer Jack of the national committee for a Sane Nuclearpolicy will report and plans for activities at UC will be made.The national committeestates as its purpose “to lead first student group in the mid¬mankind away from nuclear war students calling for itsand toward peace with justice.” WUCB's transmitter for the New Women’s residence hallhas been completed and is now in operation.The transmitter is located in the basement area of thebuilding; its signal is carried throughout the hall oy meansof lines running up each inter-Toward this end they propose: formation anticipate it will havea progrem similar to those ofeast coast student groups and co- communication system con¬duit.This is the fourth WUCB trans¬mitter on the campus. Others arein Burton-Judson courts, Fosterhall, and International house. The new transmitter was builtby WUCB technical director SteveBrown and was put in operationlast Friday. Nelson Hyman (above) holdsthe certificate he received at theBeaux Arts ball last Saturdaynight attesting that he is the“Ugliest Man on Campus.”Hyman was the winner of theUMOC contest which was run byAlpha Phi Omega to raise fundsfor the Frakfurt exchange. Per¬sons voted last week by donatingmoney at the UMOC booth locatedin Mandel hall. Each cent countedas one vote for the balloter’s can¬didate. Over $65 was collected forthe exchange.(1) Immediate cessation of nu- operate with the local adult corn-clear tests by all countries mittee.through a United Nations agree- Local committee members in-ment. (2) International control of c*u?c_^"' Pr°fessor Kermit Ebymissiles and outer snare satellites and Roosevelt university presi-mtsstles and outer-space satellites dent Edward j Sparling. Nationalthrough the UN. (3) The support co-chairmen are Norman Cousinsand reinforcement of all agencies of the Saturday Review and Clar-concemed with upholding and ence Pickett of the Americanstrengthening the UN as an in- Friends service committee.Further information is availablefrom Ken Calkins at MU 4-9035.strument of effective world lawThe UC committee will be the Return petitionStudents who still havecopies of the petition to endthe discriminatory housingfile in their possession areasked to return them toCarlie Burrows at Greenhall, as soon as possible.PETERSON MOVINGThe CollegeLAUNDERETTE1449 East 57th St.MU 4-9236 m-sm-WNCHINESE - AMERICANRESTAURANTSpecializing inCANTOJVESE ANDAMERICAN DISHESOpen Daily11 A.M. to 19:30 P.M.ORDERS TO TAKE OUT1318 East 63rd St. BU 8-9018 UNIVERSITYBARBER SHOP1453 E. 57thFine haircuttingThree barbers workingLadies' haircuttingFloyd C. ArnoldProprietor An Invitation To TheClub & Fraternity SystemDELTA UPSILON'SALL GREEK5714 WOODLAWN AVE.SATURDAY, MAY 3 — 9:00 PMDr. KURT ROSENBAUMOptometristEyes ExaminedGlasses FittedContact LensesVisual Training1132 E. 55th St.HY 3-8372 ANDERSON CAMPUS TOURSBerkeley, California Copenhagen, DenmarkUnusual itineraries, university leadership, modest prices!Ages 18 to 26See our itineraries before you decide!Midwest representative: Knowles Cooke304 Washington BoulevardTelephone: VI llage 8-3691 Oak Park, Illinois IVY FOR SPRING & SUMMERWash Cr Wear Suits—(Coats $15—Pants $7.95) .$22.95Polished Cotton Suits—(Coats $10—Pants $4.95) $14.95Cord Suits—(Coats $10—Pants $4.95) $14.95Short Sleeve Ivy Shirts $ 2.95Our Prices Can't Be Beat... it's Smart To Buy For LessD & C Clothes Shop744 E. 63rd St. MI 3-2738“in the Neighborhood tor 40 Years'*Hours: 9 «.m. - 8 p.m., Mon. - Fri. — 9 o.m. - 9 p.m., SaturdayMay 2, 1958 • CHICAGO MAROON * 3Writer questions whethercritic viewed entire showAfter reading Rolf Forsberg’s critique on the Blackfriar show, I can’t help wondering if heactually saw it at all.His jumbling of the plot and songs, together with a complete omission of any statementabout Carol Klein, who was an important character in the production, makes those of uswho saw and enjoyed the show wonder if Forsberg was perhaps more interested in spicing hisreview with quips than realizing his title as critic.My expectation of any criticwas that he should: (1) pay the sir|gers were not operatic in. . ,. , quality, they never presented amost consideration to the per- bad tonal sound; nor did x detectformance and the quality of the any “makeshift harmony.”performers, (2) present a critical It seems that the next timeand objective style of writing, and Forsberg attempts to review a(3) evaluate what purpose, the show, he might better call atten-production did achieve ratherthan what one thinks it shouldhave achieved.Unfortunately, Forsberg didnone of these. He seemed con¬stantly in a mood of silliness andmockery. Who can wonder thathe missed some of the lyrics if hewere so interested in the orches¬tra members’ raiment?What he did do is overlook thefact that regardless of failing toestablish any dramatic milestones,the company did manage to enter¬tain its audience, and to entertainit well. The finale, although notas momentous as “Beethoven’sNinth,” was nevertheless verymoving. The music achieved afine mixing of the popular con¬ception of musical comedy to¬gether with the modern Americanvein—(maybe Barber of Hanson).The plot was light, of course,but there were never any awk¬ward moments, and the audiencelaughed at intentional jokes plusa few it found for itself. Although tion to the show rather than hisown wit.Question: Where is Rolf Fors¬berg, Mr. Hammerstein?Answer: Any fool knows that.On the other side of the tube.Lance HaddixArticle clouds issuesigned letter claimsThere didn’t seem to be much of a stir at the announce¬ment of the new housing regulations in the Maroon of April 25.The headline for the article did not reveal its true significance.The general regulations boil down to this. That any stu¬dent who hasn’t had two yearsof college will have to live in (Editor’s note: The article wasthe dormitories or with relatives somewhat unclear. This rule will*rrrents’tiVe °* h*S WiS^eS or b*s apply only to entering studentsL. * , ,. x „ and not second year students. Pos-The regulation, contrary to the ... . .. , , ..statements of the article has a Slbly a way of statmS thegreat deal of significance, not requirement is that students un-only as a specific rule (the expla- der 21 who have completed lessnation that it would only apply than two years of College educa-first year students tion must spend their first yearominously does not mention the . . .. . . ,,percentage of second year stu- in dormitories. This would ap-dents who might want to flee the Pty. as the author of the letterexperience of the dormitories) ... states, to about 5 per cent of theSigned letter entering class.A friar defendsall but the endsTo the hallowed boards of Mandela shiny space ship flew;But sounded there the critics’ knelland valiant crew he slew.At first I wept and tore my hair;ill-starred expedition!!In black and green you’re lyingthere,has Rolf no contrition?I thought then of the audience,They all enjoyed the show.As much as did the gals*and gentswho made the space ship go.Though Alpha’s planet did notseemto any weathered eye.To glow with “My Fair Lady’s”gleam,it was the College try!So spare the barbs, the acriddarts,sarcastic old cliches;For Blackfriars sing with all theirhearts,“We loved those hectic days!!”Had you dear Rolf bothered to see(instead of just pretending)Our whole dear show, from A to Z,You should have panned theending!Carol EbertBlackfriars ’58Saunders electedSaunders MacLane, chair¬man of UC’s department ofmathematics was elected oneof six counsellors of the Na¬tional academy of science atthe academy’s annual meetingTuesday in Washington.The six counsellors, and thefive elective officers, managethe affairs of the academy,established by act of Congressin 1863 as the official adviserto the government on scientificmatters. Approximately 600of the nation’s natural scien¬tists are members of the acad¬emy, elected for their distinc¬tion in research. ~YY\ cfucaao11 laroonIssued every Friday throughout the University of Chicago school year andintermittently during the summer quarter, by the publisher, the Chicago Maroon,Ida Noyes hall, 1212 East 59th street, Chicago 37, Illinois. Telephones: MI 3-0800,extensions 3263 and 3266. Distributed without charge on campus, subscriptionsby mail, $3 per year. Office hours: 1 to 5 pm, Monday through Friday. Deadlinefor all material 3 pm, WednesdayEditor-in-chiefGary MokotoffManaging editorRobert J. Halasz Associate editorRochelle M. DubnowNews editorMary FinkleSports editorDan Cosgrove Gadfly editorRichard BrooksCartoonistsLiza FlanneryDick MontgomeryAlan Petlin Culture editorNeal JohnstonCopy editor* Donna DavisPhotographic stoff: Robert Malone, Dave Coffey, Ed Dephoure.Editorial stoff: Claire Birnbaum, Ina Brody, Tom Cablk, Jane Forer, LanceHaddix, John Herzog, Irene Kenneth, Gene Moss, Nancy Penkova, UldisRoze, Carol Silver, Elizabeth Stroup, Ed Szkirpan.Business ManagerLawrence D. KesslerAdvertising managerGordon Briggs Circulation managerJoan Helmken SWEENEY IN THE TREESSpring is here—the season of tree-sitting contests. This I ap¬plaud. Tree-sitting is healthful and jolly and as American asapple pie. Also it keeps you off the streets.Tree-sitting is not, however, without its hazards. Take, forexample, the dread and chilling case of Manuel Sigafoos andEd Sweeney, both sophomores at the Nashville College of FolkMusic and Woodworking, and both madly in love with a beau¬tiful alto named Ursula Thing, who won their hearts singingthat fine old folk song, I Strangled My True Love with Her OwnYellow Braids, am} I’ll Never Eat Her Sorghum Any More.Both Manuel and Ed pressed Ursula to go steady, but shecould not choose between them, and finally it was decided thatthe boys would have a tree-sitting contest, and Ursula wouldbelong to the victor. So Manuel and Ed clambered up adjoin¬ing aspens, taking with them the following necessaries: food,clothing, bedding, reading matter, and—most essential of all—plenty of Marlboro Cigarettes.We who live on the ground know how much you get to likewith a Marlboro. Think how much more important they mustbe to the lonely tree-dweller—how much more welcome theirfine, mild tobacco; how much more gratifying their free-drawingfilters; how much more comforting their sturdy, crushproofflip-top box. Climb a tree and see for yourselves.Well supplied with Marlboros, our heroes began their tree-sitting contest—Manuel with good heart, Ed with evil cunning.The shocking fact is that crafty Ed, all unbeknownst to Manuel,was one of three identical triplets. Each night while Manueldozed on his bough, one of Ed’s brothers—Fred or Jed—wouldsneak up the tree and replace him. “How can I lose?” said Edwith a fiendish giggle to his brother Fred or Jed.But Ed had a big surprise coming. For Manuel, thoughhe did not know it himself, was a druid! He had been abandonedas an infant at the hut of a poor and humble woodcutter namedCornelius Whitney Sigafoos III, who had raised the child ashis own. So when Manuel got into the tree, he found much tohis surprise that he had never in all his life felt so at home *and happy. He had absolutely no intention of ever leaving.After seven or eight years Ed and his brothers wearied of thecontest and conceded. Ursula Thing came to Manuel’s treeand cried, “I am yours! Come down and pin me.’!But Manuel declined. Instead he asked Ursula to Join himin the tree. This she could not do, being subject to mopery(a morbid allergy to woodpeckers),*so she ended up with Edafter all.Only she made a mistake—a very natural mistake. It wasJed, not Ed, with whom she ended up.Ed, heartbroken at being tricked by his own brother, tookup metallurgy to forget.Crime does not pay.This column is brought to you by the makers of MarlboroCigarettes who suggest that if you are ever up a tree whentrying to find a gift, give Marlboros. You can't miss!1411 E. 53rd FA 4-5525 — HY 3-5300Cafe EnricoFeaturing — Complete Wine List andHors d'oeuvre TableSmall Large Small Large12" 14" 12" 14"Cheese ... ...1.15 1.55 Combination^ ..1.75 2.25Sausage ... ...1.45 1.95 Mushroom .... 1.60 2.10Anchovy .. ...1.45 1.95 Shrimp 1.75 2.25Pepper & Onion 1.30 1.80 Bacon & Onion. 1.60 2.10Free Delivery on All Pizza to VC Student*4 • CHICAGO MAROON • May 2, 1958G A D F IYIt has been the wise custom of this column to limit itself to issues pertaining directly*° *!** univeMity community. This week, the column has broken from this custom, topublish an article dealing with the bomb test. It is the editor's contention that there aresome ^issues on the national and international scene, which Walter Lippman calls "crisisissues'. These issues call for a rallied and united student opinion. The subject of thisweek's Gadfly is such an issue.—Ed.A nuclear handwriting in the skiesEven in Nazi Germany therewere a lew people who couldforesee, after a certain point boththat the German people were go¬ing to be unequal to the task ofdeposing Hitler and Nazism andthat the likely outcome of thatcountry’s militarization would bea monstrous second World War.A false estimate of “things tocome” was the notion that Hitler’sReich would triumph over all,lasting a thousand years. Erro¬neous also was the idea thatdecent-minded elements wouldsomehow defeat the Nazis in timeto prevent Germany from com¬mitting national suicide and thecrime of world war. Of course, ifenough people had spoken out,acted, and made this last viewprevail, then it would not havebeen erroneous; but they did not,and a recognizable point of no re¬turn was reached beyond whichIhe German people went on totheir own and the world’s greatcalamity.AS FEARFUL as the Nazi men¬ace was to the world, it neverthe¬less pales in comparison with theglobal atomic war being preparedaround us today. Victims of athird World War would numberin the hundreds of millions orhigher. Bad as were the gas ovensof Buchenwald and Dachau, Bel-sen and Auchwitz\ infinitelyworse is the prospect of wholenations being incinerated at onetime, large sections of our ownincluded.A bad dream that can neverhappen — the fantastic concernof radicals, pacifists, and Quak¬ers? We may be finding out fairlysoon now. All that is needed is for the US Strategic air command toextend a few hundred miles fur¬ther its protectively deterrentflights of A and H bomb loadedairplanes in the North Polar re¬gions. Suppose the deceptive blipson the US radar screens that trig¬ger off such flights happen someday or night to persist fifteenminutes longer than usual? Whatthen?AS FOR American participa¬tion in the nuclear arms race:is this taking us towards peace,as the AEC and the State Depart¬ment claim? An answer is avail¬able from the prepared speech ofthe chief of the US Strategic aircommand;“General Curtis E. LeMay de¬clared yesterday that ‘the dan¬ger of general war is on theincrease’ because of risingSoviet nuclear and air power.“The Air Force’s Vice Chief ofStaff told newspaper publish¬ers here that his service didnot believe in ‘the false se¬curity that derives from be¬lieving in the myth of mutualdeterrence.’ ”Thus, the more the USA armsitself with nuclear deterrents, themore the USSR does the samething, which is hardly surprisingsince that is what an arms racemeans. But if mutual deterrenceis a myth, and if co-existence isout, as Dulles and the defense de¬partment make clear on everyoccasion, what could the true se¬curity be that Gen. LeMay wantsexcept a preventive striking ofthe first blow?It follows that the nuclear armsrace itself must be opposed as leading to a third World War.What about the testing of nuclearweapons? If, as will be shown,the nuclear arms race is depend¬ent upon such testing, then nu¬clear weapons testing must bestopped in order to halt the armsrace.THIS IS because further test¬ing of nuclear weapons leads andmust lead to two developments:additional countries will build andtest their own nuclear weapons;more powerful weapons will beintroduced, such as a cobalt bomb,or an oxygen bomb, which willhave to be tested in their turn,according to the logic of the AEC,in order to deter enemies, etc.Since these outcomes must resultfrom the continued testing of nu¬clear weapons by the big powers,and since they would mean bothan extension and a stepping-up ofthe nuclear arms race, it is clearthat stopping nuclear weaponstesting is the key to halting thearms race which in turn is thekey to preventing World War III.A point of no return is close athand in the nuclear arms race!Each of us has an immediate anda long range stake in what hap¬pens, but there is no guarantee atall that we will act in time in ourown interest to help preventWorld War III. It remains a trag¬ically open question whether weAmericans are interested in emit¬ting even a whimper—let alone abang—of protest at the nuclearhandwriting in the skies. Gadfly PolicyGadfly is an attempt on the part of the Maroon to pro¬vide provocative ideas to the campus at large. The columnis meant to be written by students and faculty memberswho wish to have their ideas expressed in the Maroon, andis not a Maroon staff editorial column. Articles will beprinted unsigned, and the author's name will be held inthe strictest confidence by the Gadfly editor.The opinions expressed in the column Gadfly do notnecessarily represent the editorial policy of the Maroon,or its staff.Readers are invited to express their views on Gadflyarticles in the "Letters to Gadfly."Send articles or letters to Gadfly, Maroon office, IdaNoyes hall.Beaux Arts ball(from page 1)Also deserving praise is Sals-bury -house who came to theBeaux Arts ball committee’s res¬cue and helped move furnitureout of the Ida Cloisture club intime for the dance.Adding to the festivity of theevening were the cast of “My FairLady.” The cast served as judgesfor the costume ball. BrianAherne, stricken with mononeu-cleosis. and Anne Rogers, “strick¬en” with her vacation, were un¬able to attend the ball as origi¬ nally planned. Marilyn Taylor andMichael Evans, lead replacementsin the play, along with Charles‘Victor, Hugh Dempster, Mr. andMrs. Eric Brotherson, Reed Shel¬ton and Donna Beaumont chosethe prize winners.Mrs. Leonard Meyer, Mrs. Neth-erton and Lee Wilcox, membersof the cast of Faculty revels, ac¬companied by Robert Ashenhurst,entertained at the ball, as didAnne James, Carol Ebert, JerryMast and Douglas Maurer of theBlackfriars production.free deliveryOMAR’S PIZZA1145 E. 55thIVY 3-5150Captures yourpersonalityas well asyour personphotographer’ BU 8-08761457-9 E. 57th St. START OF THESECONDAMERICANREVOLUTION/ODETTAS1NQSFolk music concertSaturday, May 108:30 p.m.Kenwood-EllisCommunity church46th and Greenwood avenueAuspicesE. V, Debs ForumTickets available at the Disc1367 E 57Donation $1.65Students $1.25 Again, a shot heard around theworld — the charge that firedRussia’s man-made moon.Again, an urgent call for help.Today, a revolution must takeplace in our classrooms. Forwith the launching of Sputnik,a challenge to our entire systemof education was also launched.To answer it, our standards ofeducation must be re-examined.Some of our schools arc ex¬cellent right now. We mustraise the others to their level.America needs first-rate educa¬tion ... for the future of ourchildren and our nation.For information on what youcan do in youf own community,write: “Better Schools,” 9 E.40th St., New York 16, N. Y.This messagt is publishedas a public servicein cooperation withThe Advertising Council. Clark and Clark sAnnual Clearance ofOLD BOOKSWill Start SATURDAY, MAY 3 at 10 A.M.As customary all books in this clearance will be sold at theuniform price of5C A POUND(minimum sole 10c)To satisfy those of our customers who have hitherto avoidedweighty books at these soles a bulk price of$1°° A BUSHEL(your selection)hos been established for the soleCLARK - CLARKBooksellers to the University of Chicago Community Since 19241204 East 55th Street Chicago 15 HY 3-0321Hours: 10 /I.W. to 6:30 P.Yf. Closed SundaysMay 2, 1958 • CHICAGO MAROONCHESTERFIELDLive-action shot—Saddle Mountains, Wash,SS\VV.NX\X^iFarabee addresses NS A confabby Carol SilverNSA’s regional conferencewas keynoted last Friday eve¬ning by Ray Farabee, thepresident of US NSA. Quotingfrom a speech given at the ninthannual NSA conference, held atUC, Farabee lamented the factthat the student today is primar¬ily concerned with “starting hisbusiness career in his sophomoreyear.” The student, he feels, mustbe responsibly concerned with hisproblems as a student, and moreespecially with the larger respon¬sibilities placed upon him as acitizen and as a member of theworld community.Stresses roleHe stressed that the role of thestudent organization is necessarilysmall, but that that of the individ¬ual student would be even moreinsignificant. When the studentbecomes concerned about thoseareas which do and must interesthim, as student and as citizen, hehas the opportunity to contributeto the growth and developmentof his and other’s educational ex¬perience.Farabee outlined a number ofspecific areas of interest for NSAschools, and emphasizing thetheme of “student responsibility,”said that it is up to the studentgovernments of these schools tocontribute to both the academicand non-academic aspects of col¬lege life. Commenting on theproblem of rising enrollments hesuggested that academic stand¬ards and curriculum evaluation should be undertaken by studentgovernments, and an effort bemade to encourage higher stand¬ards.Much emphasis was placedupon the problems created by thecurrent vogue among large uni¬versities for gigantic living units,with five to eight hundred stu¬dents living in one undifferenti¬ated dormitory. Mentioning thata recent NSA study has shownthe great impact which bull ses¬sions and dorm discussions haveon student decision making, theNSA president suggested thatseminars be held on the problemsthat the individual students findin these large living blocks, inadjustment to them, and in otheraspects of dorm living. He sug¬gested also an examination (or areexamination) of the potentialeducational experience of the fra¬ternity or sorority house.The international crises whichinvolve students was suggestedby Farabee as a proper topic fora student government educationprogram. He emphasized ourclose ties to students in otherareas of the world, and the closeconnection of our interests in aca¬demic freedom, civil rights, andcivil liberties. The problems ofH-bomb testing, the internationalsituation and national issueswould be especially appropriate.Major problemA major problem which he feelsevery officer of every student or¬ganization must face, is the prob¬lem of the student's apathy to¬ward student government in par¬ ticular and in general those largerconcerns to all of which shouldbe of interest to the student evenwhile still a student. Progrems ofconcrete action, and better co¬ordination of activities were sug¬gested to encourage the disinter¬ested and apathetic student toparticipate in this area of studentaffairs.Neglect supportOn student economic welfare,Farabee deplored the fact thatthe student governments ofNSA’s campuses neglected toslupport the eighty-fifth congress’legislation on federal scholarshipaid, which might have provided a maximum of 10,000 and a mini¬mum of 1,000 scholarships peryear. It is the responsibility ofthe student governments and alsoof the indiivdual student to peti¬tion the congressmen concernedfor action on legislation pertain¬ing to educational programs. Healso emphasized that student gov¬ernments should be actively push¬ing for low cost housing, studentdiscounts, and co-op systems.The problems of discriminationwill be studied by NSA under a$15,000 grant from the Field foun¬dation. It is specifically to spon¬sor programs on integration inthe South this year.Those UC members of the NSA delegation who are also on Orien¬tation JBoard were especially in¬terested in what Farabee had tosay on the problem of the “fresh¬man year.” Remarking that ori¬entation programs are usuallysomewhat less effective than avisiting fireman’s tour of thecampus, he made suggestions forthe improvement of a student’sfirst introduction to college. Theseincluded sending out a readinglist to all entering freshmen.Farabee suggested that, such ma¬terial as “The Man in the GreyFlannel Suit” be included, withcomments on its implications forthe college student.Third regional NSA heldon Northwestern campusv by Carol SilverThird regional convention for this year of the Illinois-Wisconsin region of the NationalStudent Association was held last weekend at Northwestern. The full slate of ten delegatesand alternates, as recently elected, went from UC and participated in the workshops of theconference.The voting delegation allowed to UC was reduced from ten to six by the passage of the newregional constitution at the opening plenary session. This new constitution provides thatthe number of regional dele-gates allowed to a participat¬ing school be cut to the samenumber of delegates as are al¬lowed at the national convention,plus one.The new constitution was op¬ posed by the Chicago delegationon the grounds that by reducingthe number of delegates, the re¬gional NSA was cutting the num¬ber of students who would takean active part in the workshopsMEN OF AMERICA:SUMMER JOBOH THE RANCHDriving cattle!Desert sun ablaze!Pounding leather,Rounding up the strays!On the range,| You’ll find a manStops to take big pleasureWhen and where he can...£) Liggett & Myers Tobacco CoNothing satisfies like theBIG CLEAN TASTE OF TOP-TOBACCO REGULAR KING and who were supposed to takeback to the participating' cam¬puses the programs, and policiesof the NSA. Thus the delegationfelt that, in those places where thework of NSA should be done, orat least formulated, the region isreducing the number of studentsinvolved.The constitution was ratified,however, and will remain in effectunless a majority of the schoolsin the region have expressed theirdisapproval within a two-monthperiod.Activity on Friday evening wasconfined to discussion of RayFarabee’s keynote address and ofsome of the problems highlightedin it. The theme of the confer¬ence, student responsibility re¬garding tfie crisis in high educa¬tion, was continually referred toin these discussions.The meeting of the workshopson Saturday morning was pref¬aced with a speech by Reg Green,former NSA president. He spokeof the crises brought on by in¬creasing enrollment: the greatemphasis on natural sciencecourses, greater conformity, thefinancial problems, and generalovercrowding. Ho emphasized es¬pecially the challenge of the stu¬dent who desires a higher educa¬tion and is prevented for anyreason from getting it, Includingfinances, discrimination, familyproblems, or overcrowding. .He stressed that the prejudicewhich claims the only valid highereducation to be a four year liberalarts program followed by gradu¬ate school, is nonsense. If theprestige of the junior colleges andvocational training schools per socan be increased, it may help totake the pressure off of the pres¬ent facilities.Four workshops were held, twoof which were led by UCers. LeonKass held the commission on cri¬sis in higher education, and OttoFienstein led one on federal aidto education. The two other dis¬cussions were concerned with theproblems of rising enrollment.Concrete proposals of action tobe taken by student governmentsof regional schools were drawnup, especially from the workshopon federal aid. Suggested was acampaign of letters to congress¬men, state senators, and cabinetmembers, to highlight the greatneed for federal assistance. A re¬gional committee is also to be setup to coordinate these efforts andto prepare a report for the na¬tional conference this summer.This was passed by the regionalplenary, and will be carried backfor passage and action by mem¬ber schools.6 • CHICAGO M A R O O N • May 2, 1958UCTC spirit, functionin university explainedby Dan CosgroveIf you are an athlete who prefers to compete against a carefully chosen group of yourpeers, and one who likes to come and go in drawing room style, then University of Chicagotrack club is hardly your cup of tea.But if you belong to that carefree and dedicated company of track and field devotees towhom open competition and comradeship and that fast-dying commodity, the amateur spirit,are things worth searching for, then—assuming you live in Illinois—UCTC is for you.The guiding hand of this in¬ternationally-known organiza- honal AAU Senior 10,000-meter of the athletes will never be ques¬tion (in track circles) is Ed- championship. tioned.ward “Ted” Haydon, Maroon Club members and relay teamshurdler of 25 years ago, who now h?ld tl}ree American, one Cana-coaches our varsity and cross- dian> six world records, and innu¬merable meet records in the Unit¬ed States and foreign countries,including Germany, Trinidad, Ru¬mania, Italy, and the Union ofSouth Africa.Coach Ted Haydon, right, gives last minute instructionsto Bud Perschky and George Karcazes before a track meetin the fieldhouse. Haydon, a former Maroon hurdler of 25years ago, coaches the varsity track and cross country teamsin addition to the University of Chicago track club.Hold behavior talks country teams.The club has no preconceivednotions of what it wants to do,other than to provide an oppor¬tunity for men to run, on an ama¬teur basis, and to develop them¬selves.Don’t solicit“We do not solicit membershipfor the club,” said Haydon, “nordo we discriminate against any Takes $$$To participate in events cover¬ing the face of the globe, takesmoney, more money than any oneathlete could afford. Here the UCTC has been one of the bestpublic relations angles the Univer¬sity has had, attracting graduatestudents who can’t compete col-legiately due to their graduatestanding. Where it does not at¬tract the athlete, it attracts theindividual who might have mis¬conceptions about the University.The club, in spite of the goodwill it spreads, isn’t greatly pub¬licized. Last December the clubwas host to the National AAU10,000-meter championships. Inthe meet nine national teams corn-athlete is given aid with theone because of race, religion—-or money the club has received peted, including a team of Hun-lack of ability. Our only require- through the year by donations, garian refugees, and many indi-ment for membership is residence meet guarantees, newspaper sub- vidual stellar performers,in Illinois.” scriptioqs, and gate receipts. The In the newspapers the club wasThe track club started, more or only compensation any club mem- runner-up to a syndicated, “Eng-less spontaneously in 1948, and bers receive is for transportation, lish wassail and cookies,” story.The role of behavioral sciences in teaching and research pro- was first limited to UC students lodging, and meals. Even this Again, little mention was made ofgrams of business schools will be the subject of an invitational ?r graduates. It soon expanded to isn’t guaranteed. The athletes, for student Alan Jacobs, who repre¬conference sponsored by business school, Monday and Tues- *nclude those from other schools the most part, pay their own way. sented the United States at thedav after Lawton Lamb, former Illini All guarantees go directly to the Maccabiah games in Israel lastn J „ .. ... miler who was working out in the club and then are ear-marked for fall and has also tied the worldMore than 30 representa- business, with emphasis on char- fieldhouse, inquired,tatives somewhat trips so that the amateur^tanding 70-yard record.from universities, acter of curriculum and research plaintively, why he couldn’t com-, ^foundations, and the governmentwill attend the sessions, to bedirected by Bernard Berelson, pro¬fessor of behavioral sciences inthe school.Delegates are expected fromButler, California (Berkeley),UCLA, Carnegie Tech, Columbia,Dartmouth, Harvard, Indiana,MIT, Michigan State, North Caro¬lina, Northwestern, Pennsylvania,Stanford, Swarthmore, and Tu-lane, as well as from the Fordfoundation, the Rockefeller foun¬dation, the Russell Sage founda¬tion, and the department of health,education, and welfare.Dr. Donald Young of the Rus¬sell Sage foundation will discussthe experience of introducing the £ust> 1956.applications.Six additional behavioral scien¬tists from the school will attend:Manning Nash, assistant profes¬sor of anthropology; N ormanMartin, assistant professor of in¬dustrial relations; Morris Stein,associate professor of psychology;Gary Steiner, assistant professorof psychology; Herbert Stember,associate professor of marketing(social psychology), and JacobWeissman, associate professor oflaw.Professors Berelson, Nash,Stein, Steiner, Stember and Weiss¬man have been appointed to thebusiness school faculty since W.Allen Wallis became dean in Au- pete with the club. He became thefirst non-Maroon member.At the present, track club mem¬bers include Phil Coleman, grad¬uate student at the University ofIllinois, who competed in the3,000-meter' steeplechase in theOlympics; Jim Golliday, co-holderof the world’s 100 yard record;and Olympian Ira Murchison, whohas tied the world’s record in fivedash events.Champs membersStill other members are Joel« McNulty, NCAA high hurdlechampion, a law student at Illi¬nois; Lawton Lamb, former Illinigreat in the half mile and mile;Ben Almagauer, former NotreDame track captain, now an in¬structor at New Trier high school;and Harry Price, captain of the1943 Indiana track team and nowdirector of special activities forthe University.These men devote their hoursafter school or work to training;weekends they enter meets. Nopot of gold awaits them.During the past year these menand others have represented theclub in 47 meets including the bigEastern meets such as the “Phi-Malcolm Sharp, professor of law, will discuss a new book ” the“World Peace through World Law,” Wednesday at 8 pm af games, and the New York ACInternational house. games.Written by Grenville Clark and Louis B. Sohn, the book hott i^Tbigmeet include Shehas been praised by Justice Central AAU Indoor and OutdoorWilliam O Douglas of the US senbower’s statement, “There can track championships, the CentralSupreme court and Thomas K. be no peace without law.” AAU 5000-meter run, and the Na-behavioral sciences into profes¬sional education, notably in thefields of health and public wel¬fare. University representativeswill explain their current pro¬grams for incorporating behavior¬al science material in schools of Increasing emphasis on the re¬lationship of the behavioral sci¬ences to the fundamental princi¬ples taught in education for busi¬ness has become an importantpart of the business school’s cur¬rent program.Sharp to speak on peaceFinletter, former secretary of theair force.Clark is a lawyer and formerpartner of Elihu Root and HenryL. Stimson. Sohn is professor oflaw at Harvard university.Fundamental premise of thiswork is President Dwight D. Ei-24-HourKodachrome colorfilmprocessingModel Camera Shop1342 E. 55th HY 3-9259Special Offer25c discount on any pizxaMon., Tues., Wed., Thurs., OnlyFree delivery toUC StudentsTerry's Pizza1518 E. 63rd Ml 3-4045 Scottish checks608 n. michrgan Subdued miniaturechecks, woven in Brit¬ain of long - staple Su¬danese brushed cotton,in our button down shirt. 'Jockey brand T-shirtsmade me irresistible!”“I was a Saturday night bookworm, and not because I likedbooks more than dates. To put it bluntly, I was resistible. Thenmy best friend told me I needed to make a better appearance—I needed Jockey T-shirts. I started wearing these good lookingT-shirts, and girls started to call me for dates!“Now, thanks to Jockey T-shirts, I’m dated weeks in advance.The twin stitch collar that fits so smoothly, the trim-fitting bodyof the shirt, these are the main reasons why I’m so popular andcomfortable these days.” tJockey T-shirts aretailored extra long to staytucked in. Free, comfort¬able arm movementguaranteed.Jockey' T-shirtBRANDmad* only byCoo per'», Incorporated f Kenoeha, WisconsinMay 2, 1958 • CHICAGO MAROON • 7ALEXANDER’S RESTAURANTSpecial SundayBAKED SALISBURY Menu IncludesMushroom SanDinnerIncluding choice of: Soups, salads,potatoes, vegetables, beverages, dessertsSunday Dinner Prices Range from $115 to $275Seven days each weekUC's nine tops Glenview,bows to ValparaisoApparently recovered from their drubbings by Valparaiso,the varsity baseball squad jumps on Glenview naval air base,Saturday, and won handily 19-5.Neiman and Clay, on the mound, combined to hold Glenviewat bay while the Maroons col- ~lected their 19 runs on 16 hits.Levy, Griffin, and Crain led theoffensive drive while Levy andThompson held the defense to¬gether.LINE SCORE:Glenview 000 100 202 — 5 <0Chicago 010 710 22x—19 10 5Tuesday, the varsity traveled toValparaiso to be beaten worsethan before. Errors, mental andphysical, penalized a fine pitching performance by Ben Mijuskovic.Mijuskovic, plagued by a sorearm earlier in the season, over¬came this handicap and allowedonly six hits to Valpo.The Maroons were able tosmash out five hits but couldn’teke out a run. UCs offensive con¬sisted of two hits by Gene Crain,and one each by Shields, Bauer,and R. Taylor. Defensive high¬lights weren’t noted.New group formed- by. John HerzogThere is a new organization on campus. It seeks to establishcommunication between students and administration on thepresent state and the past, present and future changes in theUniversity.It seeks the support of all students who concur with thisend. Its policy is not rigid, but will be formulated by its mem¬bers. Its name is the Committee for liberal education.It is not connected with Student Government, nor is it politi¬cal in nature. It will strive to conduct itself responsibly andrationally. It does not want to “make trouble.”It welcomes you if you concur with these aims. Watch forannouncements of meetings. Golf team has bad season:* Vtdrops first three gamesSo far this year the golf team has been thwarted in its efforts to live up to pre-seasonexpectations.On April 18, the varsity was defeated at Longwood by a powerful Wabash squad. In spiteof the 76 shot by Marumoto and the 81 shot by “Bishop” Styzens, the six-man team lost 20-7.Four days later, on April 22, Boycheff’s squad traveled to Valparaiso, Indiana, to bedrubbed 13Mi-11/*!- In this meet Marumoto and Styzens, the varsity’s number one and Bvomen, respectively, were the : ^ —squad’s low shooters. nine holes and one point for the same manner as the individualSaturday, the squad, was, *ovvest score of »he match. matches,for some reason, feeling its oats On occasion two men of a team This year the varsity’s numberas it took on both University of will play against two of the oppo- one “hotshot,” Wendell “Moto”Illinois (Chicago) and Wayne sition concurrently with their in- Marumoto has scored 11% pointsState at Longwood. The day was dividual matches. In this case an out of a possible 18. The team ofwindy and bitter in more than one additional three points are award- Marumoto and Styzens has scoredrespect as the team lost to Wayne, ed to each two man team in the 5 out of 6.Levy athlete of weekIra Levy, freshman second baseman, has been chosen ath¬lete of the week for his performance in the Glenview navalair base baseball game, Saturday.Levy drove in three runs with a bases-full triple to breakthe game wide open in the —fourth inning. He also collect- the team in total offense. On de¬ed two singles, a walk, and scored fense, Levy handled seven chancestwice in five times at bat, to lead without an error.12,/3-2% and lost to U of I, 11 *i-6 Vs.How are losses scored ? The sys¬tem is a simple one.Maroon teanis are comprisedof five or six men. Each golferis matched with a man of equalrank on the opposition, first manwith first man, second with sec¬ond, etc.Each individual match countsthree points; one point to the manwith the lowest score for each“PioyneMwc PAINT & HARDWARE CO.Hyde Park's Most CompletePaint and Hardware Store1154-58 E. 55th St. UC Discount HY 3-3840 UC team heroesLast Friday and Saturday, April 25 and 26, the Maroontennis team traveled to Northwestern to meet the Wildcats,Purdue, and Michigan State. Chicago scored but 10 pointsto the 22 points totaled by Michigan State and Purdue, andNorthwestern’s 36. ’The team, returned from on the University of Illinois (Chi-their Big Ten adventures, pounced cag0) Tuesday. With the windblowing dirt clouds over the rack¬eteers and Thompson missingfrom the ranks, the squad defeat¬ed the Pier men 7-2.The heroes in singles for theday were Howland 6-0, 6-0; Herst8-6, 6-0; Finger 6-3, 64; and Toni-andel 6-1, 6-1. In the doubles, thelaurels went to Herst-Howland6-2, 6-3; and Thomanson-Tonian-del 6-3, 6-1. Villians include Kauf¬man in the singles and Kaufman-Froser 2-6, 6-3, 3-6. The results of his play In thisgame stem from his continualstriving to improve his abilitythrough tireless, determined ef¬fort during practice, the athleticstaff stated.“For this example and his un¬selfish attitude toward his teamand teammates, the coaching {staffhonors him as the athlete of theweek.”«Rose dance yearby J. Kilmer, Rutgers ’08A fling before finals, Delta Up-silon’s annual Rose Dance, will beheld at the chapter house, 5714Woodlawn Avenue, tomorrow at9 pm. The affair will be limited tofraternity men and their dates.- Music will be provided by StuClayton.UNIVERSITY HOTELNewly Decorated Rooms — Private Tub and. ShowerKitchenettes Available. Doily Maid Service. Reasonable Rates.Two Blocks from 1C. Permanent and Transient Guests.5519 Rlackstoue DO 3-410#SfAe PHOTOGRAPHERS1171 EAST 55th STREET MIDWAY 3-4433Double-header!wear theARROWBi-Way Sportopen or closedYou get extra innings of wear fromthis convertible collar, because it’sready wherever you go. Close itwith a tie or wear it open ... withequal ease. There’s an extra meas¬ure of comfort in its Arafold collardesign. Every inch of the airy open-weave fabric looks crisply neat, evenon the hottest days. From $4.00.C/uett, Peabody & Co., Inc.ARROW—Casual Wear LA RABIDA BENEFIT. SHOP1512-14 East 67 StreetSPECIAL CLEARANCE SALEOpen 9 am ... 5 pmSaturday, May 3thru Friday, May 9All sales cash only No layaways* c H ICAGO MAROON • May 2, 1958 - LIIIIIAltl.t NS -THE CITY OF LOS ENGELESoffers outstanding opportunities to librarians and children's librariansto become a port of the fastest - growing large library system inthe country. ^Salary: $4500 to $5508 1Excellent sick leave and retirement benefitsCaid holidays and vacationsHlany other ciril service benefitsCandidates may apply now and receive a definite appointment priorto coming to Los Angeles.Contact your Placement Office for details or write toPersonnel OfficerLos Angeles Public Library630 West Fifth StreetI^»s Angeles 17, CaliforniaComing events on quadranglesFriday 2 Mayof statistics,science '58, review of statistics, com-tmtlnff machines, and mathematics.7-30 am, WGN-TV, channel 5.Jazz workshop, Jam session with guests.Reynolds club, 3:30 pm. % a # j * ■, , ,Undergraduate math club, lecture by yVeOneSdOy / MoyJames McCawley, Jr ..on "Mathe- Episcopal evensong, Bond chapel, 5:05Charles Stember of the businessschool, Soc scl 201, 7:30 pm.Concert band rehearsal. Mandel Hall,7:30 pm.Gates hall coffee hour, Gates lounge,10-12 pm.matlcal theory of relations: Intimateand otherwise." Eckhart 206, 3:30 pm.Lutheran student group meeting, din¬ner at 6 m (cost), discussion at 7.“The fruits of American culture,"panel discussion, Sally Cassidy, Col¬lege instructor In social sciences,chairman.Saturday 3 MayRecorder Society. Ida Noyes hall, 2:30pm.Sunday 4 MayRoman Catholic masses, DeSales house,8:30, 10, and 11 am.University religious service, the Rever¬end Bernard M. Loomer, professor ofphilosophy of religion, FTF.TV program, WBBM-TV, channel 2,"The Next Step."UC Symphony orchestra rehearsal, Man-del Hall, 7 pm.Lecture: "The arms race and educationfor peace,” Brad Lyttle, 5638 Wood-lawn, 8 pm.Social dancing, International house, In¬struction, 7-8 pm, dancing, 8-11 pm,50 cents non-residents.Monday 5 MayMaroon staff meeting, Maroon office,3:30 pm.International house movie, “On theWaterfront," assembly hall, 7:30 pm.Admission 50 cents.Glee club, “The peaceable kingdom,"Graham Taylor chapel, CTS, 9 pm.Organ recital by Benjamin Hadley,Rockefeller chapel, 8 pm.Tuesday 6 MayUC Service League coffee hour, Mrs.Marcus Hlrschl, 5649 Woodlawn, 10 am.Communication club: “Motivation re¬search: does it exist?" professor pm. Glee club rehearsal, Ida Noyes hall,7 pm.Country dancers, Ida Noyes, 8 pm.New Dorm coffee hour, 9-11 pm.W9YWQ technical meeting, Reynoldsclub room 301, 9:15 pm.Thursday 8 MayEpiscopal church holy communion,Bond chapel, 11:30.CLASSIFIEDSUniversity rote 30c per line. Others 60c per line.Phone Ml 3-0800, Ext. 3265 Interclub officers electedRecently-elected officers of interclub council are BarbaraQuinn, president, Delta Sigma; Sylvia Hedley, treasurer,Quadrangler; Carol Neff, secretary; Mortarboard; Edna Ar¬rington, social chairman, Esoteric; Phyllis Ritzenberg, rush chairman,Mortarboard; Odessa Ragsdell, publicity chairman, Wyvern; CarleenJohnson, service chairman, Sigma; and Virginia Hickey, sing chair¬man, Delta Sigma.Interclub will hold a sing and mothers’ tea at Ida Noyes hall, Sun¬day at 3 pm. Club women, their mothers, faculty members, andfaculty wives are invited to the annual event.For sale Rooms for rent during summer quar¬ter. For information Ph: BU 8-9870.Columbia Encyclopedia. Latest edition,with Illustrations. Like new. $20. Larry,MU 4-1308, eves.1947 Dodge, good driving condition, newbattery, $75.00. Ph.: DO 3-7996.New bicycles, discounts. Ph.: MI 3-9048. PersonalServicesFrench tutoring. Call FA 4-3367.Help wantedMen Camp Counselors, 19 and older.Excellent salary. Interesting work. Writefor application: Camp Conestoga, 621County Line Rd., Highland Park, Ill.For rentOfficial bulletinStudent healthPersons Interested In getting poliobooster shots may receive them at stu¬dent health at a charge of 50 cents,from 9 am to noon, acWrdlng to thefollowing schedule:This Tuesday, persons with final ini¬tials H-K; next Friday. L-M; Tuesday,May 13. N-R; Friday. May 16, S-V; Tues¬day, May 20, W-Z; Friday, May 23,students’ wives and children: Tuesday,May 27, persons who are unable to comein earlier.Selective serviceMale students seeking deferment fromthe selective service (draft) should re¬quest the registrar to submit SSS form109 to his local board.Students should go to the registrar’soffice. Administration 103, accordingto the following schedule:Today, persons with final initialsK-L; Monday, M-N: Tuesday, O-R;Wednesday. S; Thursday, T-Z; next Fri¬day, students who could not for goodreason, prepare and file the SSS cardon the date scheduled.Dean of students, CollegePetition for spring convocation bache¬lor’s degree In absentia must be sub¬mitted to the dean of students In theCollege by May 16.Application for twelfth grade certi¬ficate, deadline May 29.Registration for comprehensive exam,inatlons In spring quarter, office oftest administration, May 29.Application for room in residencehall for summer quarter, $10 deposit,May 29Application for room in residence hallfor academic year 1958-59, $25 deposit,by this Thursday. Forms and lhforma-tlon available from house heads andhousing office. Administration 103.Advance registration for summer andnext academic year should be madewith adviser. Administration 201, be¬tween May 12 and June 6. Confirmationof advance registration by a $20 regis¬tration deposit to the bursar by July 15.Students planning to receive bache¬lor’s degrees this quarter and who planadmission to a division or professionalschool of the University should file ap¬plications this quarter. Forms availableat College adviser’s office except lawschool where they can be obtained fromthe office of the dean, first floor, Lawbuilding.Students who expect to complete gen¬eral studies component of bachelor’sprogram for AB with professional optionIn the spring quarter, and plan to enterthe graduate library school, law schoolor business school In the summer orthe autumn, should file their applica¬tions Immediately.Next Septembertake your class notes ifiSpeedfvriling ®SHORTHAND• Just 6 week*• This summer(mornings or afternoons)• Uses ABCs ... 120words per minutePrepare for easier studying,higher grades, or for aGLAMOROUS CAREER;learn modern method inChicago’s largest shorthandschool. Typing also,e Evening School —12-14 weekso Coll, visit, or writ* NOW forSpecial Summer ScheduleASK for the NANCYTAYLOR CHARM SCHOOLbrochureSneedwr/ling *■=* SECRETARIAL SCHOOL OThe School With o Business Atmosphere37 South Wobosh Avenue, Chkogo 3FINANCIAL 6-5471>- AIR CONDITIONED SUMMER SUBLET, June 15-Sept. 1.6*/a rooms on campus. Suitable for 3 or4 students or family with children.Enclosed back yard with play equlp-ment. Call MI 3-1959.Park Forest 2 bedroom home for rent.$125. Lease. No dogs. Near school andshopping. Available June 1. Phone PI8-5245 or MI 3-0800, ext. 2521, and leavemessage for T. A. Chandler.Female grad student would like to shareattractive apartment for summer. CallMaroon. Three students (male) looking for otherstudents to share comfortable 8-roomapartment for summer months. Twobaths. Individual bedrooms, hi-fi, com¬pletely furnished. Two blocks fromcampus. $35 per month. MU 4-1308, eves.The Qaudie Queens challenge the EsowrecksTo se who’s the best of the weaker sex.If you’re not nimble, If you’re not quickWe’ll pull you Into the Pond so Ick.We’ll meet you there the 11th of Mayat 3 pm, don don’t delay.You bring your mugs—we’ll bring thebeer.We’ll have a party, weather rainy orclear.To give away, one kitten, orange, male.Call HY 3-8184.MiscellaneousFor your Sunday dinner outing, Alex¬ander’s Restaurant. 1137 E. 63rd.Wide gold wedding band engraved withseven symbols Including the letter N. M.Nettleshlp, HY 3-1241, 5143 Kenwood.Lost—onyx and diamond setting fromring on Midway in front of Ida Noyes.Reward. Call Debbie Mines, Beecherhall. SUMMER SESSION . . . UNIVERSITY OFHAWAII54 DAYS$499All Expenses PaidFrom the West Coast A Program Exclusivelyfor COLLEGE STUDENTS andTEACHERS. This price includeseverything except meals andpersonal expenses.Earn Extra Credits While on a Dream Vacation!PRICE INCLUDES: Round trip transportation. Excellent accommoda¬tions. Complete sightseeing. Water sports, dances, parties, sail cruises,picnics and many other activities.For Complete Brochure and Other InformationWrite, Phone or VisifUNIVERSITY STUDY TOURS OF HAWAII, L.A.”oFf"iCERM. 206—635 SO. KENMORE—NEAR WILSHIRELOS ANGELES 5, CALIFORNIA DU. 3-3100, DU. 3-3109NAMESTREETCITYU. of ChicagoYou'll be siftin' on top of the world when you change to Iiern flavorYou get a moreeffective filteron todays L4MLook for the patent number • • •on every pack...yourassurance that you are gettingL'M’s exclusive filtering action Best tastin’ smoke you’ll ever find!Put yourself behind the pleasure end of an L*M. Get the flavor, thefull rich taste of the Southland’s finest cigarette tobaccos. The patentedMiracle Tip is pure white inside, pure white outside, as a filtershould be for cleaner, better smoking. ©1958 Liggett & Myers Tobacco Co.May 2, 1958 • CHICAGO MAROON • 9SSOL1 ™FOTA presents lecture Concerts praised;on "electronic music"by UldLs RozeFor a few hours last week, Mandel Hall echoed with the sound of hissed incantations, vi¬brating metal, and reversed sneezes. The occasion was Dr. Vladimir Ussachevsky’s illus¬trated lecture on “Musique concrete.”Ussachevsky is a composer and professor of music at Columbia university. He was assistedby Leland Smith and Leonard Meyer of the UC music department.Ussachevsky first commented on some of the technical aspects of this new musical pro¬cedure. ‘‘Electronic music op-erates with sound as a plastic strument. It may be used singly no longer worry about perform-substance, and shapes it into or in combination with an orches- ers and performances, but aboutmusical forms much as a sculp- tra, as illustrated by Ussachev- amplifiers and loudspeakers,tor shapes clay.” sky’s co - authored “Rhapsodic As a final demonstration, Ussa-Several schools already exist. Variations for Tape recorder and chevsky played three completeMusique concrete, widespread Orchestra.” A complication aris- pieces in the new idiom,in both France and the United ing from this is the fact that the The first was composed by theStates, uses as its raw materials conructor must follow the tape Yugoslavian composer Malik,the modified existing sounds of recorder. using methods of musique con-man and nature. Ussachevsky then commented crete. Malik’s contribution was aElectronic music (in the strict on some of the functional aspects restrained counterpoint to thesensei, he remarked, is popular of the two leading schools. voices of a woman reading ain Germany. Here the sound is The composer loses certain re- French poem about a femalecreated by electronic means strictions when he trades his pi- beast.alone. Pure tones are mixed with ano for a tape recorder. He hears Electronic music was repre“white noise” to create the total the music as he creates it. A new sented by a work of the Germanfabric. No microphones are used, world of sound becomes available composer, Heinz Staffhausen.Tape music, as practiced by to him, either of his own creation This highly organized piece adopt-Columbia, is not confined to any or by extending the range of con- ed a great rhythmical complexitysounce or procedures. ventional instruments. He is freed and. severity of timbre. It wasAnother interesting type is the from the confines of a temperate more microtonic than ever,“calculated music” composed at scale. In general, he has a more Ussachevsky concluded with athe University of Illinois by giant complete control over his mate- composition of his own, whichcomputers. Mozart's position thus rials, especially in the German resembled an engagement befar seems secure, Ussachevsky school. There is still human par- tween hostile groups of aircraft,adddd. ticipation, but not realization. To with occasional sensuously pain-The tape fecord is the basic in- be more exact, the composer may ful bursts of noise. programs are variedTwo Festival of the Arts concrts given Friday and Satur¬day nights were entirely consistent with the general level ofquality of the Festival. The Musical society, in a concert ofworks by American composers, proved itself an extremelycompetent group of perform- —ers, and the Apollonian soci- ten “in an extremely advancedety, in a very varied program,sustained a rather high level ofappeal throughout — well, nearlythroughout.To consider first things first,consider the Musical society, play¬ing in Mandel hall, to a smallaudience, the musicians, mostlystudents, plowed undauntedthrough a series of never easyand often extremely difficult se¬lections. No one gave a bad per¬formance, and the work of ReginaFerber on a ’cello sonata by Wil¬lis Charkowsky and that of in anidiom,” such a policy leaves thisreviewer cold. Could it be that thepiece couldn’t sell itself the firsttime? Or might it be that theperformers couldn’t do justice toit with just one try? In any event,the procedure seems of dubiousvalue.Nevertheless, the general levelof the performance of the piecesin the concert was quite impres¬sive. Why more people don’t at¬tend the invariably free Musicalsociety concerts is certainly amystery.The next night, Saturday, theApollonian Society sangin Breasted Hall. Basically a mad-nata by Andrew Imbrie were superlativc.Also excellent was the perform¬ance accorded Leland Smith’s can¬tata “On the Existence of God.”One low point of the programwas the repeated playing of aclarinet composition by RichardSwift. Justified on the basis of theassertion that the piece was writ-\L// Jeanne Bamberger^on a piano so- rjga] group, -the Society branchedout a bit to include some religiousmusic and a few choice folk songs.The performance as a whole wasvery appealing, though in partsnot entirely free from confusion.Facility, delicacy, and humorcharacterized the approach of thegroup: As a friendly little concert,the event was almost ideal.Both concerts were in keepingwith the rest of the Festival ofthe Arts— appealing, entertain¬ing. solidly good, almost but notquite first rate.John HerzogRadio discussionreset for SundayDean John P. Nethertonand Mary Alice Newman, di¬rector of student activities,will appear on WUCB’s program“Enquiry” at 7 pm this Sunday.The Netherton-Newman discus¬sion, “The Place of students activ¬ities in this University,” previous¬ly scheduled for last Sunday wasdelayed by circumstances beyondWUCB’s control, according to thestation manager.kenneth oetao, Chile FillyINDIANA TECHNICAL COIL.WHAT'S A MINK-UPHOLSTERED CARRIAGE?oavid dulanset. Furry SurreyU. OF PITTSBURGH IF SILENCE WERE REALLY GOLDEN, fishermenwould be up to their hip boots in cash. They’re sonoiseless, they won’t even wear loud shirts. Butwhen they (Groan!) run out of Luckies, theyalmost lose control. They rant, rave and blow theirstacks—all in sign language, of course! Result?The unusual phenomenon called a Quiet Riot!Lucky’s popularity, after ail, is no fluke. A Luckyis the best-tasting cigarette you can buy—and forgood reason. It’s made of naturally light, good¬tasting tobacco, toasted to taste even better. Sowhy flounder around? Get Luckies yourself!WHAT'S A POORLY LIGHTEDBASKETBALL COURT?MARTIN GILBERT.U. OF ARKANSAS Dim Gym WHAT IS A WANDERING ESKIMO?FRANCES HUNEKE,STANFORD Polar Stroller WHAT DO DIPLOMATS NEED?BOB GOLBERG.MANKATO STATE COLL. Pact Tact Stuck for dough?START STICKLING!MAKE $25We’ll pay $25 for every Sticklerwe print — and for hundredsmore that never get used! So startStickling—they’re so easy youcan think of dozens in seconds!Sticklers are simple riddles with,two-word rhyming answers.’Both words must have the samenumber of syllables. (Don’t dodrawings.) Send ’em all withyour name, address, college andclass to Happy-Joe-Lucky, Box67A, Mount Vernon, N. Y.LIGHT UP A liarlt SMOKE-LIGHT UP A LUCKY!T. C«.| Product of JdLwp&nywnp — c/v&taco- is our middle name : BOR done ijt Movers and Light Hauling '| LU 2-4660 \\Mitzie’sFlower Shop1340 E. 55th St.MI 3-1020Flowers forIftothers Daymay 11Flower Wire ServiceStudent DiscountTeachersWafitedFor port time teaching in JewishReligious schools, two or morehour* per week, on Sunday morn¬ings, Saturday mornings, or mid¬week afternoons. Openings inSeptember in schools in all portsof the greoter Chicago area. Stu¬dents of the Jewish Faith who orepreparing for teaching in the pub¬lic schools ore eligible.Board of JewishEducation72 East 11th StreetHA 7-5570, Ext. 294 representative of theBoard of Jewish Educationtrill interview candidateson Thursday, May 8, be¬tween 12 noon and 4 p.tn.at The HUM Foundationt57IS South WoodlawnAvenue10 • CHICAGO MA R 0 0 N • May 2, 1958Culture VultureTheDisc1367 E. 57th St.Recordof the weekLANGUAGERECORDSFOR TRAVELERSFrench •German •Spanish •Italian •Two 10" Recards*3.99 Brevity is one of the highest virtues in art, as any thoughtful student of T.Sturge Moore will be glad to tell you. When a poet has something to say, he shouldsay it as concisely and as clearly as possible. When he has nothing to say, he shouldbe silent. I find that in this introduction I have nothing to say.ON CAMPUSTheaterUniversity theater's productionof “Intimate Relations” is over, soit hardly needs publicity. In sum*mation, it could be said that if youdidn’t see it, you missed some¬thing.Unfortunately it appears that agreat many students missed some¬thing. I watched the audienceleave the Reynolds club theaterSaturday night, and the unescap-able fact hit me that the audiencewas almost completely adult. Fewstudents take enough advantageof many worthwhile events of¬fered here-and this is true ofmuch more than UT.My brief sermon can be summedup by an admonition to be abso¬lutely certain to see Samuel Beck¬ett’s play, “Kid Game,” when theNew York company presents it inMandell hall, May 22 to 24. Stu¬dent and faculty discount ticketsare on sale now for 1.50 at theReynolds club, desk. This will bethe only production the companywill give outside of New York.Concerts and recitalsThe UC Symphony orchestraconcert, originally announced forthis Sunday, has been postponeduntil May 11. The concert, whichwill be presented in Mandel, willconsist-of Brahms’ “Tragic” over¬ture, Borodin’s “Steppes of Cen¬tral Asia,” Haydn’s “Clock” sym¬phony, No. 101, and Kartok’s “Ru¬manian dances.”This will be the first UC sym¬phony concert in over nine years.The program is an interestingand ambitious one for a group sorecently organized to undertake.The UC concert band is alsocoming out in the open, literally.Next Friday the group has sched¬uled an open-air concert in Hutch¬inson court, starting about 8 pm.An organ concert will be pre¬sented Tuesday at 8:30 pm byBenjamin Hadley. Hadley, organ¬ist of the Grace Episcopal churchin Hinsdale and associate editorof The Diapason, will play works by Johann Ernst, J. S. Bach, Niko¬laus Bruhns, Cesar Frank, LuiusVieme, Leo Sowerby and Paul deMaleingreau. Rockefeller chapel.Heinrich Fleischer, chapel or¬ganist, and James R. Lawson,chapel carillonneur, are present¬ing concerts each Wednesday aft¬ernoon in the chapel. Lawsonplays at 4:30, Dr. Fleischer beginsa half hour later.Art exhibitionsHillel house is displaying select¬ed works by members of the UCart faculty. This show, which willcontinue through May 16, is openfrom 10 am to 4 pm Mondaythrough Friday.Lectures -A multitude of lectures are de¬scending upon us. Starting todaywe have two. Wright will con¬tinue his series of lectures on thehistory of China by discussing“Buddhism in Chinese culture:The period of domestication, A.D.317-589.” The speech starts at 4:30pm in Soc Sci 122.This evening, G. D. H. Cole, Chi¬chele professor of social and po¬litical theory, Oxford university,will start his series of two lec¬tures, entitled “British societies inretrospect and prospect.” Thesefree lectures will be held at 4 pmin Rosenwald 2. The second lec¬ture will be given next Friday.The concluding lectures inWright’s series on Buddhism inChinese history and culture willbe given next Monday, Wednes¬day and Friday in Soc Sci 122 at4:30 in the afternoon.Next Wednesday, Bose will de¬liver his opinions on the subject,“Gandhi: the man and his ideas—Satyagraha movements in India,”at 4:30 pm in Mandel hall.A second lecture centering around the conditions in India will be pre¬sented Thursday when SurendraNath Sen, professor of history atWisconsin, speaks on “India’s1857 uprising—mutiny of war ofindependence?” 8:15 pm, Mandel'hall.And finally, Alan Pryce-Jones,English writer, critic, journalistand editor of the London Timesliterary supplement will speak on“The angry young men of Eng¬land: english literature in thenineteen-fifties,” Friday, May 9, at8:30 pm in Soc Sci 122.Motion picturesDoc Film presents the third inits series of four programs withthe general title “Of Love andLust” this evening in Judd 126.This particular showing is sub¬titled “The Freudian Focus” andconsists of five avant-guardishshorts: “Fireworks,” dealing withhomosexuality and sado-maschoc-ism experienced on the level of anightware; “Wedlock,” a paradoxon the symbolism contained in anyof the cliche ridden experimentalmotion pictures; and “PleasureGarden,” a film celebrating thevictory of the “pleasure principle.”Also on the program are “Des¬perate Heart,” a combination ofpoetry and dance and “Together,”\ film showing the relation oflove to loneliness and isolationsymbolically portrayed in a storyof two deaf mutes.Next Friday the series will con¬clude with “The Children of Para¬dise” created by Mircel Carne andJacques Prevert. The films areshown at 7 and again at 9:15. Ad¬mission is 60 cents.This evening, the Burton-Judsontheater will not present “CitizenKane” as was announced, butrather four shorts by Charlie Chaplin: “1 o’clock” and “Behindthe screen” are two of these. B-Jmovies are shown at 7:30, 9:30and 11:30, admission is 40 cents.Monday evening, Int house willfeature the award-winning Amer¬ican film “On the Waterfront,”starring Marlon Brando with in¬cidental music by Leonard Bern¬stein. Int house films are shownat 7:30 in the Home room. Fifty-cent admission.OFF CAMPUSTheaterChicago is left with only oneprofessional play: “My FairLady.” This is certainly worth see¬ing a second time; if you’ve notseen it a first time; well, you’renot socially acceptable until youdo.In addition to this, this eve¬ning, professional actors will giveShow’s “Too True to be Good” ina reading form for the benefit ofmembers of the Shaw society. Stu¬dent membership in this group is$2. The reading will be held in theBernard Shaw room of the Sher¬man hotel.Several interesting pieces ofnon-professional theater are alsoon the boards, most notably, theGoodman theater’s production of“The Dream” — a combination ofShakespeare’s “Mid SummerNight’s Dream” and Purcell’smasque opera “The Fairy Queen.”This production, conceived anddirected by Dr. John Reich, di¬rector of the Goodman, will openMay 9 and a special student dis¬count is offered. This production,the final performance of the yearfor the Goodman, is, to say theleast, lavish. In addition to animmense cast, the play featuresdancing, choreographed by Ruth"SALT OFTHE EARTH"May 4, 1958 Sunday, 7:15 pm1041 W. Newport AvenueChicagoAdmission 50c Refreshments "YOU CAN'TTAKE ITWITH YOU"May 9 fir 10 8:30 pmMandel Halt Admission FreeSiSftheliyjte JaXlutlieafcte„ , late paKM 53tuj stoatpta NO-7 9071 r ITHE GOLDEN AGE OF COMEDY andthe W. C. FIELDS FESTIVALAre held over through MondayFriday, Saturday, & Monday: Golden Age at 5:45, 8:10,10:40; Fields at 7:05, 9 :35.Sunday: Fields at 2, 4:30, 7, 9:35; Golden Age at 3:10,5:35, 8:10, 10:40.Check the daily papers for our special Tuesday through Thursday- which will be followed on Friday by: Mario Schell in Gervaise.uninMiBwhere.there’s life...there’sKIN<3 OP BEERSANHEUSER-BUSCH, INC. • ST. LOUIS * NEWARK • LOS ANGELES Page, the Chicago chamber or¬chestra, and professional guestvocal artists. —The New York critics reviewingproduction were as lavish withtheir praises as Dr. Reich is withhis effects.Northwestern university willpresent Carlo Goldoni’s farce com¬edy “Servant of Two Masters” thisFriday, Saturday and Sunday inthe Speech building auditorium onthe Evanston campus. Perform¬ances start at 8:30 pm, and thereis also a 4 o’clock matinee on Sun¬day.Concerts and recitalsOdetta is sing i n g tomorrowevening at the Student unionbuilding of IIT, 47 W. 33rd st.Her concert starts at 8:30 and allseats cost $1.50.Dieter Kober will conduct theChicago chamber orchestra inHandel’s “Orlando overture” andMaasz’s “Music for Chamber or¬chestra No. 1” and also Mozart’s“Violin concerto number 3” withPaul Carlson as soloist, Sundayafternoon, 3:30, in the Hutchinsonwing of the Art institute.The Metropolitan opera compa¬ny will be in town from the 22 tothe 25 of May, performing“Eugene Onegin,” “Der Rosen-kavalier,” “Madama Butterfly,”“Sampson et Delila,” “Faust” and“II Barbiere Di Siviglia.” If youwant tickets waste no time.DanceI’d also caution 'you to not de¬lay at all if you want to see anyof the six performances the Moi¬seyev dance company will presentin the opera house May 16through May 21. Admission pricesrun from $2.20 to $6.60.-wt- m.•mumm.W..., wocuAnachronism?Not really. ’Cause if Colce had beenaround in Caesar’s day, Caesar wouldhave treated himself to the sparklinggood taste, the welcome lift of Coke!,Caesar's motto—“I came, I saw, Iconquered.” Pretty good motto forCoke too—the prime favorite in over£00 countries today!/SIGN OF GOOD TASTEBottled under authority of The Coca-Cola Company byThe Coca-Cola Bottling Company of Chicago, IncMay 2, 1958 • CHICAGO MAROON • 11I wmNew Plan instituted in thirtiesby Robert HalaszWHEN ROBERT M. HUTCHINS assumed the presidency of UC in 1930, advocates of fun¬damental revision of the College were hopeful of sympathetic supportThey were not disappointed. Soon afterwards, the UC’s unique “New Plan” was adopted,and throughout the thirties the curriculum was revised in ways unheard of ten years be¬fore. Indeed, it should not be thought that Hutchins left the UC with the identical programof general education which he advanced in 1931. Throughout the thirties, specially appointedcommittees examined and :overhauled the college curric¬ulum.It was Hutchins’ thesis that theAmerican universities had mod¬eled themselves after the greatGerman universities which hadproduced an impressive amountof scholarship. But the Germanstudent entering the universityhad gone through the humanisticgymnasium, whereas his Amer¬ican counterpart had attended ahigh school system which had de¬cayed and now was totally inad¬equate to give him the generaleducation which he needed sobadly. Hutchins proposed tljat theCollege of the UC assume thisfunction.\The first reform, adopted in1930, was essentially administra¬tive in nature. It instituted a col¬lege, ending in the second year,with the graduate schools to becomposed of four divisions: bio¬logical sciences, physical sciences,social sciences, and humanities. Acollege faculty was created whichwas in large part autonomousfrom the divisions. By reducingduplication, this reorganizationsaved the university large sumsof money. v rolled in a four year college. Al¬though Hutchins felt these stu¬dents should receive Bachelor’sdegrees, it was correctly antici¬pated that other educational insti¬tutions would still regard thegraduates as having completedonly the equivalent of two yearsin college. The BA or BS in theuniversity thug became a mean¬ingless degree, £fid' following theaward of an Associate of Arts de¬gree, the student remained in thedivisions three years before get¬ting a Master’s degree. The inno¬vation was so great that the planwas not put into practice until1937. not participating, assumed an airof skepticism, possibly a “soufgrapes” attitude. However, withina few years the program had be¬come an institution and the plan’sproponents, in advacing the ideafor other American colleges anduniversities, were able to presentan impressive amount of factsand statistics designed to showthe superiority of the new system.IN NOVEMBER, 1932, the Col¬lege faculty became completelyautonomous and a previous rulerequiring faculty members toteach in the divisions • also wasabolished.Even the advocates of the NewPlan were not particularly pleasedwith the first year of its opera¬tion. Freshmen frequently cutclasses. Sophomores, who wereTHE SECOND REFORM, ad¬opted on March 5, 1941, was ofgreater importance and becameknown as the “New Plan.” Itsmajor components were: (1) atwo year college, devoted to gen¬eral education would be created;(2) the credit system would beabolished, to be replaced by a se¬ries of seven comprehensive ex¬aminations, leading to the degreeof Associate of Arts. Studentswould take a comp for one-yearcourses in biological sciences,physical sciences, social sciences,and humanities. A fifth compwould be devoted to written Eng¬lish, and two more to divisionalsequences to be chosen by thestudent. Foreign language andmath requirements would bebased on high school credits. Inprinciple, the placement test sys¬tem was instituted, but used onlyfor English. College attendancewas made voluntary.Change made in 1933 appliedonly to some students but was ofgreat importance. Students hav¬ing completed the tenth grade ofUniversity high school were en- Gbe Wnlvcrstt* of ChicagoInqoductory General Coursein the *SOCIAL SCIENCESSYLLABUSA NOSELECTED READINGSFJutd By ^HARRY D GIDEONSEttm mtmJEROME G. KERWINLOUIS WIRTHPreliminary EditionSeptember, 1931Distributed by tbe University of Chicago Bookstore Not only did the College change,the college student changed also.Fraternities were confronted withthe fact that a two-year collegeallowed a man only one year in afraternity before he entered agraduate division, since the U-High early entrants were tooyoung. Therefore, the fraternitieshad to adjust in order to survive.Most of them did neither. Simi¬larly, student activities suffered adecline, particularly some of themore time-consuming ones. Hutch¬ins’ attitude was not one of greatsympathy. He felt much timespent on student activities wasusually a sign that the studentwas substituting it for the moreintellectual pastimes the collegeoffered him.BUT IF the New Plan waschanging the college student, thedepression changed him evenmore. No longer did a studentcomplacently enter college withthe expectation of four years offree-spending fun, to be followedby a lucrative and successful ca¬reer as a bond-salesman. The fra¬ternities found that depressionstudents had no money, while theactivities found he had not time,since he was working his waythrough school. s mmmmmimmm mmmi mswMiwraajiInternational House MoviesMonday evenings, 7:30*p.m^ — Assembly HallMonday, May 5 — 50c — On the Waterfront (USA); m mm mam m m' m. mmwm ' mmSHOWN ABOVE is one ofthe first syllabi to come out, apreliminary edition in Septem¬ber, 1931, of the new introduc¬tory general course in the so¬cial sciences. Among the au-thors contained were RuthBenedict, Thomas Paine,Charles A. Beard, Charles E.Merriam, Immanuel Kant, andSenator Paul H. Douglas. Thesyllabus was typed and dittoed.Of the editors, course chair¬man Harry D. Gideonse is nowpresident of Brooklyn College;Jerome G. Kerwin is dean ofthe social sciences; LouisWirth, an outstanding sociolo¬gist, died in 1952. In March, 1937, the curriculumwas again reorganized, the mostimportant new feature being acourse in philosophy, similar tothe present OMP. A physical edu¬cation requirement for the firsttwo years was also established.However, the reorganization didnothing to institute a badly need¬ed placement system in foreignlanguages and math. Further¬more, other proposals were notacted upon, including extendingcollege general education to fouryears for all students and theaward of a meaningful Bachelor’sdegree upon completion of the col¬lege curriculum. WANTED!THESE EVENTS were to followduring the latter half of Hutchins’presidency, a period marked bynew in the American university—the war years, and the post-warones which followed, with a largeinflux of veterans. These yearswill be discussed in next week’sarticle.ACASA Book Store Fire & Theft InsuranceMalpractice InsurancePhone or writeJoseph H. Aaron, '275524 S. Everett Ave.RA 6-1060 Ml 3-5986 College Students and Teachersto have thetime, of their livesserving this summer asCAMP COUNSELORSAPPLY NOW. . the demand for these positions is greatSENIOR COUNSELOR OPENINGS... for men and women over 19Come in or Write for Application FormCamping UnitProfessional, Sales fir Clerical OfficeILLINOIS STATEEMPLOYMENT SERVICEi 73 West Washington Street Chicago, IllinoisScholarly Used Books — Bought and SoldImported Greeting Cards — Children's BooksReliable Typewriter Service1322 E. 55th St. HY 3-9651 (Official referrol agency for Camp Counselor Referral BureauAmerican Camping Association, Chicago Section)NO FEES CHARGED!JADED? TIRED? LIFT YOUR SPIRITS WITH THESE:MAD FOR KEEPSThe best from America's most offbeat magazine $2.95SICK, SICK, SICKThe sophisticated comic strip from the Village Voice, by Jules Feiffer. .$1.50POGO'S SUNDAY PUNCHContaining War Nor Peace (a novel treatment) and several old favorites, afew of which are incompletely new, by Walt Kelly $1.00The UNIVERSITY of CHICAGO BOOKSTORE5802 ELLIS AVE.E9d'Time for love?" is what P. J. Kelly, the Game." The Cherry Lane theater wlil giveoldest iftember of actor's equity, is asking four performances of Samuel Beckett's newNydia Westman in this scene from "End play in Mandel hall, May 22, 23, and 24.'End Game' coming to MandelUniversity theatre is bringing to Chicago fourperformances of the New York off Broadway pro¬duction of Samuel Beckett’s “End Game.”Exactly 1,000 tickets are available to each of theperformances in Mandel hall. Curtain time is at8:30 on Thursday and Friday and at 7 and againat 9:30 on Saturday night, May 22, 23, and 24.In co-operation with UT, several local bookstoreswill be running special Beckett displays. Universitybookstore, Woodworth’s, Clark & Clark, and theRed Door will have all eight of Beckett’s published works available. Stanley Givertz of the Universitytheater points out that Beckett is the type of writerone should read before seeing.Opening night in New York Walter Kerr wrote,“I understand that-there are a great many peoplejust dying to know who it was those fellows werewaiting for in Beckett’s “Waiting for Godot,” andI have a strong suspicion that (they) are going tofind their answer in “End Game.”Student-faculty discount seats are on sale for$1.50 at the Reynolds club desk.Dean, 'student leaders'discuss social regulations Four UC'ers receiveGuggenheim awardsFour UC faculty members have been named recipients ofGuggenheim fellowships, awarded for demonstrated capacityin original scholarly research and artistic creation, the JohnSimon Guggenheim memorial foundation of New York an¬nounced Sunday.Two of the University of Chicago recipients are membersof the English department. Gerald E. Bentley, Jr., instructor,will make a study of contemporary documents pertaining toWilliam Blake, Donald F. Bond, professor, will use his fellow¬ship tojnake a critical study of the “Spectator papers” ofAddison and Steele.Leonard J. Savage, professor and chairman of the depart¬ment of statistics, will do research in mathematical statisticsand mathematical probability.H. Stefan Schultz, professor of Germanic languages andliterature and chairman of the committee on comparativestudies in literature, received a fellowship to undertake astudy of Stefan George’s poetry. ,The Guggenheim foundation was established by the lateUS senator from Colorado and Mrs. Guggenheim, in memoryof a son who died in 1922. The 1958 awards are the thirty-fourth in an annual series.B. Larkin announcesUS, Polish exchangeThe national student organizations of the US and Polandhave arranged a long-term academic exchange program for1958-59, Bruce D. Larkin, international affairs vice presidentof the US National Student association, announced.Two US students, chosen byNS A, will study in Poland nextyear as guests of the Polish or¬ganization, Zereszenie StudentowPolskich (ZSP). The ZSP will se¬lect two Polish students to studyat universities here.Two members of this Universi¬ty’s Student Government, CarolSilver (SRP) and Steve Appel(ISL) are planning a motion be¬fore SG, Tuesday, that UC shouldact as a host institution for oneof the Polish students.NS^ vice-president Larkin stat¬ed, “this is the first long-term ex¬change of students negotiated be¬tween the student associations inthe .United States and Poland.”Larkin planned the program with ZSP President Stefan Olsowskiearlier this month at the meetingof the Union Nationale des Etudi-ants de France in Marseilles.Applicants to study in Polandmust demonstrate sufficientknowledge of the Polish to per¬form regular academic work inthe language by September 1958.Although preference will be givento graduate students 20-26 yearsold, undergraduates are welcometo apply. Expenses will be sharedby NSA and ZSP.The deadline for applications isThursday. Forms may be obtainedfrom the Polish Academic ex¬change, USNSA Internationalcommission, 142 Mount Auburnstreet, Cambridge, Massachusetts.Approximately 20 students, representing most major student activities and living unitsmet last week with dean of students John P. Netherton and director of student activitiesMary Alice Newman to discuss proposed new social regulations which the dean, of studentsoffice wishes to see instituted.Among the points discussed were regulations concerning time limitations, registration andchaperonage of parties, and the use of alcoholic beverages.According to Netherton theresults of the meeting will bemimeographed and distributedto the presidents of all studentorganizations for further sugges¬tions.The new rules will extend cur- istered student organizationswould know what “competition”to expectStudent social affairs attendedby men and women and sponsored a^ Orientation week activities asby registered student organiza- the only present activities whichare considered all-University.fews on parties. The previous tions must register at the studentrule requiring that all weekday activities office “preferably aparties be concluded by 10 pm week in advance but not laterwill be extended to 11 pm. Week- than two days before the event.”end parties and those before holi- With regard to chaperonage, . , . , -days will be required to end by the committee members wanted it consisted of members from- the Miss Meyer announced the ap1:30 am instead of the previous made clear that students as well Maroon, Cap and Gown, Student pointment of three staff mem*_ . _ - i . TTmiam 1 ATtl Di Qinrma UTaaIo i. • x .i. 1 •To publish 'Phoenix'Phoenix magazine will be published, announced SelmaMeyer, spokesman for the bird publication recently. The firstedition of the rehatching magazine will make its entry oncampus during orientation week, next autumn quarter. Itwill sell for 25 cents.Miss Meyer, who has de- he managing editor; Maroon edi-clared herself “publisher” of the tor-in-chief Gary Mokotoff will bestudent venture stated that Phoe- business manager. “Sort of anstudent venture, stated tnat pnoe- editors- emeritus club,” chucklednix will not be a typical college Miss Meyer:humor magazine. “In fact,” she The magazine is still lookingRepresentatives on Inter-frater- added, “a light feature magazine, for additional material for thenity, Inter-club, Inter-dorm, and would be a more appropriate first issue since it was consumedB-J councils were present at the title.” in flames (now established to bemeeting. In addition, the group In her position as publisher, the late ’30s). Students may sendUniversity social event will becarried over from fhe old rules.Mrs. Newman mentioned theWash Prom, Beaux Arts ball, and1 am ruling. Mrs. Newman stated as faculty members would bethat this would bring the rules eligible for approval as chaperons,closer to realism. The administration strongly pre-The rules state that “all stu- fers faculty chaperons and in¬dent social affairs must be con- tends to maintain a file of thoseducted at a place approved by the members who are willing to serve,director of student activities.” It According to Mrs. Newman,was the feeling of the students at this rule will probably not go intothe ' meeting that dormitories, effect until the autumn quarterwhich previously did not have to and the present dule requiringregister their parties with the just that chaperons be over 23student activities office, should will remain in effect. Union, Nu Pi Sigma, Iron Mask, bers: current assistant businessOwl and Serpent, WAA, Order of manager of Cap & Gown, Steve _ __the "C,” Blackfriars, Festival of Appel, will be editor-in-chief; Cap coming full-fledged staff membersthe Arts, and Orientation board. & Gown editor Jean Kwon will may apply to the same office.manuscripts and cartoons to theCap & Gown office, Ida Noyeshall. vAny persons interested in be-Frost gives commentary“The Great Misgiving” was the as the worst offenders: “They pos-tbolism, but why bring it out intotitle of a commentary by Robert sess too much knowledge.” the open.” In his reading of “De-be-strongly urged to inform the That no social event may be Frost last Thursday. The subject, Speaking of evolution Frost partmental,” Frost interruptedoffice of their events so that reg- held on the same night as an all- p0et and the man attracted a “““Honed that science “has so himself to muse over the endingscrowd that continued filling the many by-products that you won- of the two previous lines “cloth,mmm m mmmmmm % mrnmm 8 g mmmm mmmmm mm. rnmmrnm a m seats and the back of Mandel hall der wbat life is about, this brings motn , . . that is the key to this- long after the announced starting on an existentiahst P°int of view Poem ... rhyme. *-*«—-* —Dean announces newtlmeof815forthcoming book, was defined byFrost as the fear of the spirit, the As Frost read-that it is nothing.” This Frost from his poems he covered manyT.n ... . . .... , , . referred to earlier as the “Great subjectsinalivelyandwittyman-.I5e.^bje^’.,also tlt,le..of.bls Defeat.” ner, often returning to both the■ m mm ^m rrost as tne rear ot tne soirit the In the course of bis commenta- ?ubJec* of bis talk and thespoof-I fear that it will be lost in’the ry Frost read several relevant of wnters who would giveVionor SOCiety Ot VV maLrial,buVraid Froston^ ma lines his coming book, his Poems a ^symbolic interpreta-m terialism need be feared and that a!?,ong tbem:UC’s dean of student office announced the formation of anew honorary society on campus, the Maroon key honorary.Similar to the Student aide and Dean’s award honorariesthe membership of the Maroon key society will be recom¬mended by faculty and administration and will be chosen on materialism only develops whenthe material is too big for thespirit. %Frost felt that the sdprememerit was in risking our spirit insubstantiation, a process that has “We dance round in a ring andsupposethe basis of character, Service to the University community been followed in the course ofand academic standing.Members of the honorary will serve as hosts and hostessesfor the University and will represent UC in an official capacityat on and off campus functions.m His rendition mirrored the colorand Variety of the subject matter,nut thA m rangmg from the rhythmic to theButf„d skenowS?ts in thc m,ddle “s av,h1 as, ,,he varrsand delightful and thought provoking''FOrr™ceL°rd ^ ,itUe )0keS —the. . T,„ , crowd gradually rose to a stand-And 111 forgive your great big ing ovation in honor of a man whoone on me. seemed to symbolize a living ahal-In reading his more familiar lenge to the “Great Misgiving” —trast, we now live in an age of poems Frost commented on ef- a challenge met by humbleness,materiality, said Frost, citing forts to view them symbolically, thought, wit and creativity,members of the graduate school “it is not that you object to sym- Irene Kennethhistory as man formulated ideasand carried them out—as in thecreation of the alphabet. In con-Pianissimo, ragazzi,communing ...We featureAndeker Beer on tap 55th tr UniversityMl 3-0524New Plan instituted in thirtiesby Robert HalaszWHEN ROBERT M. HUTCHINS assumed the presidency of UC in 1930, advocates of fun¬damental revision of the College were hopeful of sympathetic supportThey were not disappointed. Soon afterwards, the UC’s unique “New Plan” was adopted,and throughout the thirties the curriculum was revised in ways unheard of ten years be¬fore. Indeed, it should not be thought that Hutchins left the UC with the identical programof general education which he advanced in 1931. Throughout the thirties, specially appointedcommittees examined and 1overhauled the college curric¬ulum.It was Hutchins’ thesis that theAmerican universities had mod¬eled themselves after the greatGerman universities which hadproduced an impressive amountof scholarship. But the Germanstudent entering the universityhad gone through the humanisticgymnasium, whereas his Amer¬ican counterpart had attended ahigh school system which had de¬cayed and now was totally inad¬equate to give him the generaleducation which he needed sobadly. Hutchins proposed tljat theCollege of the UC assume thisfunction.VThe first reform, adopted in1930, was essentially administra¬tive in nature. It instituted a col¬lege, ending in the second year,with the graduate schools to becomposed of four divisions: bio¬logical sciences, physical sciences,social sciences, and humanities. Acollege faculty was created whichwas in large part autonomousfrom the divisions. By reducingduplication, this reorganizationsaved the university large sumsof money.THE SECOND REFORM, ad¬opted on March 5, 1941, was ofgreater importance and becameknown as the “New Plan.” Itsmajor components were: (1) atwo year college, devoted to gen¬eral education would be created;(2) the credit system would beabolished, to be replaced by a se¬ries of seven comprehensive ex¬aminations, leading to the degreeof Associate of Arts. Studentswould take a comp for one-yearcourses in biological sciences,physical sciences, social sciences,and humanities. A fifth compwould be devoted to written Eng¬lish, and two more to divisionalsequences to be chosen by thestudent. Foreign language andmath requirements would bebased on high school credits. Inprinciple, the placement test sys¬tem was instituted, but used onlyfor English. College attendancewas made voluntary.Change made in 1933 appliedonly to some students but was ofgreat importance. Students hav¬ing completed the tenth grade ofUniversity high school were en¬ rolled in a four year college. Al¬though Hutchins felt these stu¬dents should receive Bachelor’sdegrees, it was correctly antici¬pated that other educational insti¬tutions would still regard thegraduates as having completedonly the equivalent of two yearsin college. The BA or BS in theuniversity thug became a mean¬ingless degree, Sftd following theaward of an Associate of Arts de¬gree, the student remained in thedivisions three years before get¬ting a Master’s degree. The inno¬vation was so great that the planwas not put into practice until1937.IN NOVEMBER, 1932, the Col¬lege faculty became completelyautonomous and a previous rulerequiring faculty members toteach in the divisions * also wasabolished.Even the advocates of the NewPlan were not particularly pleasedwith the first year of its opera¬tion. Freshmen frequently cutclasses. Sophomores, who wereClx Unl»cr«it« of ChicagoInyoductory General Course~ lu in theSOCIAL SCIENCESI SYLLABUSANDSELECTED READINGS/FJittd By ^HARRY D CIDEONSECWnwJEROME C. KERWINLOCIS WIRTHP«£iiMiNA«r EditionStPTEMBlK, 1931Distributed by the I'mversitjr ot Chieego BookstoreSHOWN ABOVE is one ofthe first syllabi to come out, apreliminary edition in Septem¬ber, 1931, of the new introduc¬tory general course in the so¬cial sciences. Among the au-tliors contained were RuthBenedict, Thomas Paine,Charles A. Beard, Charles E.Merriam, Immanuel Kant, andSenator Paul H. Douglas. Thesyllabus was typed and dittoed.Of the editors, course chair¬man Harry D. Gideonse is nowpresident of Brooklyn College;Jerome G. Kerwin is dean ofthe social sciences; LouisWirth, an outstanding sociolo¬gist, died in 1952. not participating, assumed an airof skepticism, possibly a “soutgrapes” attitude. However, withina few years the program had be¬come an institution and the plan’sproponents, in advacing the ideafor other American colleges anduniversities, were able to presentan impressive amount of factsand statistics designed to showthe superiority of the new system.Not only did the College change,the college student changed also.Fraternities were confronted withthe fact that a two-year collegeallowed a man only one year in afraternity before he entered agraduate division, since the U-High early entrants were tooyoung. Therefore, the fraternitieshad to adjust in order to survive.Most of them did neither. Simi¬larly, student activities suffered adecline, particularly some of themore time-consuming ones. Hutch¬ins’ attitude was not one of greatsympathy. He felt much timespent on student activities wasusually a sign that the studentwas substituting it for the moreintellectual pastimes the collegeoffered him.BUT IF the New Plan waschanging the college student, thedepression changed him evenmore. No longer did a studentcomplacently enter college withthe expectation of four years offree-spending fun, to be followedby a lucrative and successful ca¬reer as a bond-salesman. The fra¬ternities found that depressionstudents had no money, while theactivities found he had not time,since he was working his waythrough school.In March, 1937, the curriculumwas again reorganized, the mostimportant new feature being acourse in philosophy, similar tothe present OMP. A physical edu¬cation requirement for the firsttwo years was also established.However, the reorganization didnothing to institute a badly need¬ed placement system in foreignlanguages and math. Further¬more, other proposals were notacted upon, including extendingcollege general education to fouryears for all students and theaward of a meaningful Bachelor’sdegree upon completion of the col¬lege curriculum.THESE EVENTS were to followduring the latter half of Hutchins’presidency, a period marked bynew in the American university—the war years, and the post-warones which followed, with a largeinflux of veterans. These yearswill be discussed in next week’sarticle.ACASA Book StoreScholarly Used Books — Bought and SoldImported Greeting Cards — Children's BooksReliable Typewriter Service1322 E. 55th St. HY 3-9651 Fire (jr Theft InsuranceMalpractice InsurancePhone or writeJoseph H. Aaron, '275524 S. Everett Ave.RA 6-1060 Ml 3-5986 International House MoviesMonday evenings, 7:30»p.m, — Assembly HallMonday, Moy 5 — 50c — On the Waterfront (USA)WANTED!College Students and Teachersto have thetime, of their livesserving this summer asCAMP COUNSELORSAPPLY NOW. . the demand for these positions is greatSENIOR COUNSELOR OPENINGS. . . for men and women over 19Come In or Write for Application FormCamping UnitProfessional, Sales fir Clerical OfficeILLINOIS STATEEMPLOYMENT SERVICE73 West Washington Street Chicago, Illinois(Officiol referral agency for Camp Counselor Referral BureauAmerican Camping Association, Chicago Section)NO FEES CHARGED^♦♦^OO^OO^OO^OO^OO^OO^OO^OO^OO^OO^OO^Oo'oO^OogtO^OogoegtO^M^Oo'oO^OogMgMgttgoegtegotgM^MgoO^Oo'oO^OogMgtO^OO^MgtO^OtgMgM^OtgM^OtJADED? TIRED? LIFT YOUR SPIRITS WITH THESE:MAD FOR KEEPSThe best from America's most offbeat magazine $2.95SICK, SICK, SICKThe sophisticated comic strip from the Village Voice, by Jules Feiffer. .$1.50POGO'S SUNDAY PUNCHContaining War Nor Peace (a novel treatment) and several old favorites, afew of which are incompletely new, by Walt Kelly $1.00The UNIVERSITY of CHICAGO BOOKSTORE5802 ELLIS AVE.